March 6, 2026 admin

The Creative Start: Mapping Early Career Experience in the CCI

Our recent research, based on a dataset of 701 respondents across six countries, has shed light on how young professionals actually enter the creative workforce.

When it comes to starting a career in the Cultural and Creative Industries (CCI), not all pathways are created equal. Our recent research, based on a dataset of 701 respondents across six countries, has shed light on how young professionals actually enter the creative workforce.

 

A Majority with Experience, but a Significant Gap Remains

 

Out of the 701 young people surveyed, 59.20% (415 participants) reported already having some form of work experience in the creative sector. While this is encouraging, 40.80% (286 participants) remain on the periphery with no prior experience. This balance suggests that while the door is open for many, a substantial portion of youth still faces barriers to that first professional opportunity.

 

National Patterns: Established vs. Emerging Markets

 

The data shows a clear structural divide across Europe:

    • Germany and Spain show high levels of early engagement. In Germany, for instance, 14.69% of the total respondents have experience, compared to only 1.28% without.
    • In Portugal, 9.42% are experienced, and 5.56% lacked professional experience in the CCI sector.
    • Serbia also shows a significant gap, with only 3.42% reporting experience versus 7.28% without, indicating structural barriers to market entry.
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina shows growing but uneven professional engagement, with  9.42% experienced and 5.56% inexperienced respondents.
  • In emerging markets like Montenegro, the trend is reversed: 10.56% have experience, while a much larger 18.69% are still seeking their first professional exposure.

 

Early Career Stages: The 1–2 Year Benchmark

For those who have broken into the sector, the majority are in the very early stages of their professional journey.

  • 16.39% have less than 1 year of experience.
  • 36.87% (the largest group) have 1–2 years of experience.
  • Only 5.30% of respondents have been in the sector for more than 10 years.

 

The Need for Structured Pathways

These findings indicate that while initial exposure is happening, sustaining a career is the next big hurdle. In established sectors like those in Spain (where 11.33% of respondents have 3-5 years of experience), we see more progressive skill accumulation. In contrast, emerging markets show a high concentration of youth at the absolute start of their careers.

At DigiCreate, we believe that identifying these gaps is the first step toward creating targeted training and policy interventions that support young professionals—no matter which country they call home.

Funding Agency: EACEA – European Education and Culture Executive Agency

 

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DIGICREATE Empowerment

Connecting young people from the EU and Western Balkans to develop digital, creative, and intercultural skills

101193474 — DigiCreate — ERASMUS-EDU-2024-VIRT-EXCH
Disclaimer: Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor EACEA can be held responsible for them.

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