Bnei Barak – Charedi Sector to Get 1st Communications, Advertising School

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    Bnei Barak, Israel – A haredi sector first. A professional studies center for the fields of communications, marketing, and advertising will be launched in Bnei Barak as a satellite campus of the “Habetzefer,” the Tel Aviv school run by the Israel Association of Advertising Agencies which teaches practical courses in the aforementioned fields.

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    The new learning center will receive support from advertising agencies from the haredi sector, such as Afikim, Tereo, and Bolton. Studies will focus on fields relevant to the haredi sector so that graduates will be able to integrate quickly into the haredi job market.

    Lessons will be taught in separate classrooms for men and women, and the content will be adapted to the haredi lifestyle. In the framework of courses offered by the center, the students will be taught models and concepts from the world of marketing, advertising, public relations, and journalism. They will also be asked to implement work processes in real time in collaboration with haredi advertising agencies.

    Each course of study will last between four to eight months depending on the study track. Tuition will range between NIS 8,000 to 13,000 (about $2,000 to 3,500).

    According to Habetzefer, demand for haredi advertisers has grown significantly in recent years. Many of Israel’s large firms have started marketing to the haredi public in the last decade, creating a larger haredi advertising market. Large companies are courting the sector and an increasing number of young haredim are looking to work in the field of advertising.

    This phenomenon is also expressed in the growing number of lectures given in secular institutions on marketing and advertising to the haredi sector. The haredi sector has also followed suit. It still remains, however, that there are few courses given on these fields.

    As a result, there is a noted lack in quality and professional human resources within the haredi sector, which has thus far had to train most of their work force on their own or take in professionals from other sectors. The new center is meant to provide employment to those interested in the field and ease the burden of agencies that have thus far had to train their own employees from start to finish.

    The manager of the haredi satellite will be Eitan Dubkin, CEO of the haredi department at McCann Erikson. Dubkin, 30, got his first taste of advertising in 1996 at Radio Kol Hai where he worked in broadcasting, production, and sales management.

    In 2001, Dubkin broke into the world of advertising and joined in forming the McCann’s haredi department. For the past few years, he has served there as the head of the department.


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    10 Comments
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    Honestly Frum
    Honestly Frum
    14 years ago

    BH a step in the right direction.

    Pashuteh Yid
    Pashuteh Yid
    14 years ago

    Chareidim finally admitting that the derech of the MO of having secular education is the right one.

    Moishe Groinem
    Moishe Groinem
    14 years ago

    Just wait till the Modesty Patrol find a reason to outlaw this based on Charaidi Sculerization ETC ETC.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    charedi job market? isnt that an oxi moron? totally moronic in my opinion because it will never exist until moshiach comes

    Bubbie
    Bubbie
    14 years ago

    While helping people obtain employment is a positive thing, I feel that advertising is the epitome of the olam hasheker – convincing people to spend money they don’t have on things they don’t need. I wonder if it even qualifies under “mesachek bekuvia” – (who is posul le’edus) which is defined by some as a way of earning money that has no benefit to the world (like flipping houses and possibly day-trading). I’m sure I’ll get a lot of flack for this (if the moderator even allows such an insult to all his advertisers) but – kabel es ha’emes mimi she’omra!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Charedim are not admitting that the derech of MO is right by taking a course to obtain employment. Every charedi who posseses a profession is not MO. The MO hold that secular knowledge is essential to the degree that an individual’s Judaism is lacking without it. The Charedim/Yeshivish believe that secular knowledge has no intrinsic value other that a means for an income.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    This is not the derech of MO. This is how it should be, where a “profession” is no different than an honest trade like plumbing or car repair in that it brings parnosso with kovod. And that is the way MO is moving too – BH no more MO “roshei yeshiva” wasting time learning literature and then opening yeshivos where most of their chutznik talmidim fry out.