In the "Summer Club", on Europe 1, Emma Baïz, coordinator of the "Realize your dreams" project, presented this program which supports people to help them find a job.

To help those who have trouble talking about themselves on a CV or a cover letter, he suggests that they tell their story in music.  

INTERVIEW

Supporting the people furthest from employment towards a return to work, such is the objective of "Realize your dreams", a research-action and innovation program. "It is a project that was born with the desire to support people who are outside the radar of institutions, and to give them the chance to imagine, dream and find a job that really corresponds to their aspirations, or to create their own business, "explains Emma Baïz, project coordinator, guest

of the Summer Club on

Monday

Currently, the program operates in three territories: "Lille-Roubaix, Aix-Marseille and Ile-de-France", details Emma Baïz, listing the partners of "Realize your dreams".

"We have the Interdisciplinary Research Center which works on educational engineering, the collective and artificial intelligence laboratory in Marseille, Chance, an online coaching program for people, the Catholic Institute of Lille, Synergie Family, a field association that supports people. "

Music is a universal language

To help those accompanied to find a job, "Realize your dreams" also involves music, and more particularly rap, "a very unifying lever". "Music is a universal language," believes Emma Baïz, for whom music can help candidates who have difficulty expressing themselves in a professional setting. It is from this observation that the idea for the "Tell your story" project was born, which offers beneficiaries the opportunity to set their life course to music. "To introduce yourself, when you do very classic CV or cover letter workshops, it can be a barrier to express yourself as is, to be able to talk about yourself ... Via music, it's a cathartic exercise", explains the guest from Europe 1.

The beneficiaries "are people who have not necessarily had any contact with music, most of whom have never recorded", continues Emma Baïz. But thanks to writing workshops and one-on-one coaching, good results can be achieved within a week.