Workforce Pathways Platform

Build a Local Talent Pipeline Through Real Employer Challenges

CapSource helps workforce boards, unemployment offices, economic development groups, chambers, community colleges, and employer coalitions create regional challenge libraries that connect job seekers with local employers through practical work samples, skills assessments, paid micro-projects, and pathways to employment.

A practical model for work-based learning, employer engagement, skills-based hiring, and regional economic mobility.



Regional Talent Ecosystem

Workforce Partners

Coordinate regional priorities and participant pathways.

Local Employers

Share real challenges tied to roles, skills, and hiring needs.

Job Seekers

Complete work samples and move toward paid opportunities.

Challenges → Skills Evidence → Paid Work





The Opportunity


Traditional Hiring and Training Leave Too Much to Chance


Job seekers often struggle to prove capability through resumes alone. Employers struggle to identify motivated, work-ready talent without taking on hiring risk. Workforce systems need scalable ways to engage employers, prepare participants, and create measurable pathways into paid work.



For Job Seekers

Applications rarely show what someone can actually do. Participants need practical ways to demonstrate skills, build confidence, and create evidence employers can review.


For Employers

Hiring is expensive, risky, and often based on weak signals. Employers need better ways to identify motivated local talent before committing to a hire.


For Workforce Partners

Employer engagement is hard to convert into measurable participant outcomes. Programs need scalable pathways from readiness to paid opportunity.





The Model


Turn Employer Needs Into Structured Workforce Challenges


Local employers contribute realistic challenges connected to roles, departments, skill gaps, or priority industries. Job seekers complete these challenges to explore career paths, demonstrate applied capabilities, and build portfolio evidence.

Top performers can be invited into feedback conversations, interviews, paid micro-projects, internships, apprenticeships, part-time roles, or full-time employment.


1. Identify Hiring Needs
Clarify local roles, sectors, and skill priorities.
2. Build Challenges
Turn employer needs into structured work samples.
3. Engage Job Seekers
Match participants to relevant pathways.
4. Advance Talent
Move qualified participants into next steps.




What It Means

Real Challenges. Real Skills. Real Opportunities.

This model helps workforce partners move beyond generic training by connecting participants to realistic employer scenarios, applied skill-building, and visible pathways into paid work.

Real Challenges

Employers contribute practical scenarios based on actual work, role needs, customer issues, operational priorities, or local industry problems.

Real Skills

Participants build and demonstrate skills through work samples, submissions, reflections, and portfolio evidence rather than relying only on resumes.

Real Opportunities

Strong performers can be surfaced for interviews, feedback conversations, paid micro-projects, internships, apprenticeships, or entry-level roles.





Challenge Library Infrastructure

What Goes Into a Workforce Challenge Library?

A regional challenge library gives workforce partners reusable infrastructure for employer engagement, participant readiness, skills assessment, and hiring pathway development.

Employer Discovery Cases

Help participants learn about local organizations, industries, roles, and career paths.

Skills Assessment Challenges

Let participants demonstrate applied capabilities tied to real role families.

Hiring Challenges

Give employers a structured way to evaluate candidates before interviews.

Paid Micro-Projects

Create short compensated opportunities for top performers to prove fit.

Outcome Reporting

Track participation, completions, skills demonstrated, interviews, paid projects, and placements.





Shared Value

One Model, Three Sets of Outcomes

The Workforce Challenge Library creates shared value for the organizations responsible for workforce outcomes, the employers looking for talent, and the job seekers trying to move into paid work.

For Workforce Partners

  • Expand employer engagement
  • Increase participant activity
  • Support work-based learning
  • Improve readiness assessment
  • Create measurable placement pathways
  • Generate stronger reporting for funders

For Employers

  • Discover motivated local talent
  • Reduce hiring risk
  • Evaluate real work samples
  • Support community workforce development
  • Build a stronger local talent pipeline
  • Identify candidates for roles and paid projects

For Job Seekers

  • Learn about local employers
  • Build practical experience
  • Demonstrate skills beyond a resume
  • Receive feedback and visibility
  • Create portfolio artifacts
  • Access paid projects and hiring pathways




Pilot Model


Start With a 90-Day Regional Workforce Pilot


A pilot gives regional partners a practical way to test the model, engage employers, activate participants, and generate early evidence before scaling into a larger workforce initiative.

Participants: 50 to 100 job seekers

Employers: 8 to 12 local organizations

Challenge Library: 15 to 25 employer-informed cases

Paid Opportunities: Optional paid micro-projects for top performers

Sectors: 2 to 3 priority industries

Outcome Report: Participation, employer engagement, skills demonstrated, interviews, paid projects, and placements

Design a Pilot for Your Region




90-day regional workforce pilot roadmap illustration





Challenge Examples

Example Workforce Challenges

Challenges can be designed around local hiring needs, priority sectors, employer workflows, or entry-level role families where practical skills matter.

Service Roles

Customer Success Challenge

Participants review a customer scenario and draft a practical response plan.

Sales Roles

Sales Development Challenge

Participants research local prospects and create an outreach strategy.

Operations Roles

Operations Improvement Challenge

Participants analyze a process bottleneck and recommend improvements.

Healthcare Roles

Healthcare Administration Challenge

Participants organize scheduling, service coordination, or patient communication scenarios.

Logistics Roles

Logistics Challenge

Participants review an inventory, delivery, or staffing scenario and propose a plan.

Marketing Roles

Digital Marketing Challenge

Participants create a local campaign concept for a small business or nonprofit.





See It in Practice

Explore Real Challenge Examples Already Built on CapSource

Workforce Challenge Libraries are built on the same practical case infrastructure CapSource already uses to help learners explore organizations, solve realistic problems, demonstrate skills, and create portfolio-ready evidence.

Use Case

Employer Discovery

Participants learn about a real organization, its priorities, its customers, and the kinds of problems its teams solve.

Use Case

Skills Demonstration

Participants submit work products that show communication, research, analysis, problem solving, operations, customer success, or marketing skills.

Use Case

Hiring Pathway

Employers and workforce partners can identify high-potential participants and invite them into interviews, paid micro-projects, internships, or roles.





City of Horizon workforce challenge library example




Why CapSource


Built on CapSource’s Experiential Learning Infrastructure


CapSource already helps organizations turn real-world challenges into structured projects, cases, mentorship experiences, and applied learning opportunities. The Workforce Challenge Library extends that model to regional workforce development, helping public agencies, employers, and community partners create scalable pathways from learning to work.

AI-assisted case creation
Employer challenge intake
Structured rubrics
Participant submissions
Portfolio artifacts
Employer review workflows
Skills tagging
Outcome reporting




Implementation

How a Workforce Challenge Library Gets Built

The implementation model is designed to be practical, collaborative, and focused on fast learning rather than a long planning cycle.

Step 1

Convene Employers

Identify organizations with hiring needs, skill gaps, or talent pipeline priorities.

Step 2

Build Challenges

Convert employer needs into structured cases, assessments, and optional paid project pathways.

Step 3

Engage Participants

Invite job seekers to complete challenges aligned to their goals, experience, and target roles.

Step 4

Advance Talent

Help employers review top performers and move qualified participants into interviews, paid projects, or roles.





Start the Conversation

Explore a Workforce Challenge Pilot in Your Region

CapSource can help your region adapt real employer challenges, including case-style examples already used on the platform, into a practical workforce pilot for job seeker readiness, skills-based hiring, employer engagement, and paid work pathways.