
Case Study
A Skills Action Plan for Scotland Food & Drink
Scotland’s food and drink sector plays a vital role in the national economy, supporting employment, exports, and rural communities. This report presents a refreshed Skills Action Plan that responds to changing labour market conditions, policy reform, and emerging skills demands across the sector.
PROJECT BACKGROUND
The Scotland Food & Drink Partnership first launched a Skills Action Plan in 2020, identifying priorities regarding industry image, apprenticeships, upskilling, leadership, and fair work. Since then, the operating environment for food and drink businesses has changed substantially. Employment levels have declined, the workforce has aged, access to labour – particularly seasonal and entry‑level workers – has constricted, and automation and digitalisation have accelerated across both food production and processing.
Alongside these structural changes, Scotland is undergoing reform of its post‑school education and skills system, with new policy initiatives reshaping funding, governance, and delivery. The combined impact of these developments created a clear need to review the original Skills Action Plan, refresh the evidence base, and ensure that future actions reflect both industry reality and emerging opportunities.
AIMS & OBJECTIVES




OUR APPROACH
Our work combined desk‑based research with extensive stakeholder engagement. This included:
- Analysis of labour market intelligence, policy and sector strategies
- Interviews and surveys with food and drink businesses of different sizes and sub-sectors, and from across the whole of Scotland
- Structured engagement with the Skills Advisory Group of Scotland Food & Drink
- An open workshop to present, discuss and finalise the study findings
This integrated approach ensured that the recommended actions were grounded in real industry needs.
DELIVERY TEAM
OUTPUTS AND IMPACTS
The research confirmed that many of the challenges identified in 2020 remain, in particular: sector image and attractiveness, career pathways, apprenticeships, and management and leadership. New issues were also identified: recruitment and retention, and a need for multi-disciplinary skills that have a strong digital element.
At the same time, the findings highlighted significant opportunities. Many employers are committed to Fair Work practices, internal progression, and in‑house training. Several had adopted automation and digital technologies to reduce their reliance on manual labour while improving job quality and productivity. There was also strong support for flexible and modular training that was more responsive to industry needs.
These findings were distilled into four strategic themes: sector image and attractiveness; staff recruitment and retention; current and future skills needs; and delivering skills and training solutions. These form the backbone of the refreshed Skills Action Plan.
Link to report: https://foodanddrink.scot/helping-business/other-resources/publications/food-and-drink-skills-action-plan-2025/
Optimat were a real pleasure to work with. They invested time in understanding our needs and worked collaboratively with us to refresh our skills strategy. The result is a clear, practical and well evidenced piece of work that we’re genuinely delighted with.