Tigray is predominantly rural and agrarian, with most households relying on subsistence farming and facing ongoing socio-economic challenges linked to conflict, displacement, and limited access to basic services. Since the 2022 peace agreement, the region has been undergoing a gradual recovery process amid complex political and administrative transitions. While some areas, including Mekelle and surrounding districts, have remained relatively stable, humanitarian needs, livelihood disruptions, and recovery challenges persist across many communities. Given the evolving context and varying information sources, careful contextual understanding and triangulation of information remain important throughout programme implementation and assessment activities.
Situation of Primary Stakeholders: The TVET sector in Tigray is gradually recovering from the impacts of conflict, with institutions and youth still facing resource, livelihood, and employment challenges. Despite these constraints, the region has an established TVET and employment support system led by the Bureau of TVET and Job Creation, supported by training centres and job service facilities. Demand for vocational training remains high, particularly for short-term, market-oriented courses, while businesses and financial service providers are gradually restoring operations and creating opportunities for skills development, employment, and entrepreneurship.
Rationale & Problems Statement: Tigray’s skills and employment ecosystem faces challenges related to the quality and relevance of vocational training programs (curricula, trainers, assessment guidelines, assessors, counselling services), limited employment and enterprise opportunities, and weak coordination among key stakeholders. Training providers require strengthened capacity to deliver market-relevant skills and employment services, while youth continue to face barriers in accessing jobs, business development support, workspace, and finance. In addition, coordination gaps among public, private, and development actors reduce the effectiveness and sustainability of skills and employment interventions. Strengthening local systems and fostering stronger links between skills development and labour market demand remain critical for improving youth employment outcomes.
Target Area Context: Mekelle, the capital of Tigray, is the primary target area due to its concentration of economic activities, training institutions, and support services. The city hosts over 500,000 people, around 1,500 functioning enterprises, six public TVET colleges, 17 private TVET providers, and several operational financial institutions. Four public TVET colleges currently offer more than 40 vocational courses and graduated 1,949 trainees in 2016 and 1,692 in 2017 (Ethiopian Calendar). Despite high youth unemployment, Mekelle provides a strong foundation for skills development, employment, and enterprise support.
Theory of Change: The project aims to strengthen the skills and employment ecosystem by building the capacity of key actors involved in vocational training, employment promotion, and financial inclusion. Through improved training quality, strengthened trainer capacity across 15 vocational professions, enhanced employment and entrepreneurship support, and stronger linkages among training providers, employers, financial institutions, and local authorities, the project seeks to improve youth access to market-relevant skills, wage and self-employment opportunities, and business development services. This is expected to contribute to stronger labour market systems, improved livelihoods, and greater socioeconomic stability in the post-conflict recovery context.
The goal (overall objective) of the project is to support young people in the project area through skills training and tailored post-training employment, and enterprise development supports to enhance their employment opportunities.
The consultant is responsible for conducting a baseline survey, preparing, analysing, and submitting the baseline survey report, which informs the required baseline values and inputs for the SET project.
The baseline survey is an overarching/cross-cutting activity that informs baseline values and required inputs for the project. Thus, the baseline survey covers the following –
These assessments are integral to the following output, which serves as the foundation and the entry point for improving skills and the employment sector.
| Output 1.1 (Capacity-Strengthening) – Concerned actors are capacitated to contribute to the development of skills and the employment sector for youths.
There are capacity gaps in delivering training and the provision of skills and employment services. The project cannot provide human and financial resources, so the project’s support will be primarily and substantially the technical support to trainers and all concerned actors. The project will conduct an employment market assessment to identify at least 20 professions that have market demands for both wage and self-employment. Based on the market assessment, at least 20 short-term vocational training courses (15 existing and 5 new) will be identified. Accordingly, 15 existing vocational courses will be improved (including theories, practical and internship/corporate training modules), and five new curricula will be developed. Considering the challenging context with limited resources available (for both skills and employment support provision), resource-intensive professions will not be selected. In other words, those professions that do not require high investment costs will be selected. Other training programs, such as life (e.g., safe-migration), soft (e.g., job-hunting, self-branding, decision-making) and business (including financial literacy) skills courses, will also be developed. Many other projects and organizations have developed similar ones, so these existing ones will be adopted and adapted to avoid duplication of efforts and to be cost-efficient. Assessment guidelines for all these courses will also be developed or improved (in case of existing courses). Based on the assessments’ results, the project will strengthen the technical capacity (e.g., pedagogical skills) and provide training facilities and equipment. The capacity of trainers and assessors will be strengthened based on these assessments, training programs and guidelines. The quality of skills and employment-related public services (e.g., training and career counselling and linkages, business licensing, provision of land/shade, quality of labor market assessments and tracer studies, efficiency and coordination of concerned offices) will also be assessed and strengthened, since the quality enhancement of trainers is not sufficient to optimize the other parts of the skills and employment development sector. |
Employment market assessment: The labor market assessment (LMA) is a standard tool used by many skills projects in Ethiopia and around the world. It helps identify the professions or occupations demanded in the market, which will be used as a basis for selecting vocational skills for youth. However, this tool, unlike market opportunity assessment for businesses, does not pay sufficient attention to the kinds of businesses needed in the market. As the name says, LMA looks at the market from the labors’ (jobseekers) and employers’ point of view, which is relevant to wage-employment but not really to self-employment. Therefore, the project rather aims to conduct an employment market demand to cover both kinds of wage- and self-employment.
Capacity is understood as human, technical, assets and financial resources.
Capacity-strengthening goes beyond the provision of training. Exposure or exchange visits, coaching, organizing inspirational events, providing training of trainers, etc., are a few other capacity-strengthening methods.
3.1 Inception report
3.2 Baseline survey report
7. Time frame of the assignment: July 20th to September 30th, 2026
8. Programme Schedule
| Date | Activity | Days |
| Briefing meeting | 0.25 | |
| Preliminary literature/desk review for inception reporting | 0.5 | |
| Inception report | 2 | |
| Continued literature/desk review for the main baseline report | 1 | |
| Data collection including travel days | 15 | |
| 1st draft baseline report | 6.5 | |
| Feedback from Helvetas and partner | 0 | |
| 2nd draft baseline report | 2 | |
| Feedback from Helvetas and partner | 0 | |
| Debriefing and/or validation workshop, including preparation | 1.25 | |
| Final report | 1 | |
| Total | 29.5 | |
9. Roles & responsibilities of the project staff
Nexus Ethiopia
HELVETAS Ethiopia
10. Qualifications of the consultant
The consultant shall have the following qualifications –
11. Documents for applications
The following documents are required for the application of this consultancy –
12. Ethical considerations
13. Documents for literature/desk review
Interested consultants/firms should submit their application via email through HumanResources.ETH@helvetas.org
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