Coca-Cola Beverages South Africa Unemployed Learner Visual Merchandiser Opportunities – x3

Coca-Cola Beverages South Africa Unemployed Learner Visual Merchandiser Opportunities - x3

Closing Date: 25 May 2026

Location: Various

Job Description: Coca-Cola Beverages South Africa Unemployed Learner Visual Merchandiser

To provide structured, work-based learning that equips participants with the commercial acumen and practical skills to service customers to grow volume, facilitate the order taking process, implement, execute and monitor merchandising standards for direct and indirect customers within a designated geographical area.

The role reports to the Account Developer. Level of interaction within and outside of the company as well as the nature and purpose of the interaction

The role interacts with:

Sales Team Members: To collaborate on daily tasks and share knowledge
Sales Account Developer: To receive guidance, training, and feedback on performance and safety protocols. To understand the broader sales process and ensure alignment.
Consumers: To understand consumer preferences and behaviours, which informs sales strategies and product development.

ALSO CHECK: Department of Public Service and Administration (DPSA) Circular 16 of 2026 – New Jobs Added to the List

Key Duties & Responsibilities

In-Store Execution & Merchandising Excellence

Execute daily call schedules across assigned bronze and tin outlets, ensuring alignment with planned call objectives.
Implement visual merchandising standards, stock rotation, and in-store displays in line with brand guidelines.
Ensure product quality, availability, and visibility in line with RED and execution scorecard standards, including completion of the iRED survey.
Support and educate customers on placing orders through the MyCCBA platform.
Assist in the execution of promotional activities to enhance brand visibility.
Provide relief support as needed, as directed by the line manager.

Skills, Experience & Education

  • Grade 12 with Maths or Maths Literacy (minimum pass rate 40%).
  • Grade 12 communication with English and a second language (minimum pass rate 40%).
  • Must be a South African Citizen.
  • Must be available to work six days a week.
  • Must be between the ages of 18 and 35.
  • No criminal record or adverse credit record
  • Must consent to have criminal, ID and qualification verification conducted
  • Driver’s Licence would be advantageous, (this may be required for driving to different stores)
  • Must not be enrolled on any current learnership programme or any full-time studies
  • Must not have previously completed the same qualification/learnership at another company or organisation.
  • Must be unemployed at the time of appointment.
  • A post matric qualification in Sales & Marketing

General: A learner embarking on this Qualification needs to obtain a minimum value of 120 credits to qualify for the Qualification; this learnership runs over a period of 12 months.

Interested applicants who meet the above specifications should submit:

  • Detailed CV
  • Certified copy of matric certificate
  • Certified copy of qualification
  • Copy of Driver’s License

The advert has minimum requirements listed. Management reserves the right to use additional or relevant information as criteria for short-listing. Interested applicants, who meet the above employee specifications, should please apply.

HOW TO APPLY

CLICK HERE TO SEE ALL THE 3 OPPOTUNITIES

Get Daily Job Opportunities To Your Inbox!

Follow us on our Social Media Handles to remain connected to daily opportunities:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/careerssouthafrica/

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/careers-south-africa-za/

WhatsApp Group: https://chat.whatsapp.com/JVphaaPQEOU9VBlpVJAtIi?mode=gi_t

How do I Find and Apply for a Learnership in South Africa

How do I Find and Apply for a Learnership in South Africa

Hey, young hustler from the townships or the suburbs – if you’re a South African youth staring down unemployment and dreaming of that first real break, learnerships are your golden ticket. I’ve walked this road with cousins, neighbours, and mentees who’ve turned “no experience” into steady paychecks and qualifications that bosses can’t ignore. Let’s break it down real talk, step by step, so you can grab yours today.

What Learnerships Really Are

Picture this: you get paid a stipend – often R3,000 to R5,000 a month – to learn a trade or skill on the job, while studying part-time for a nationally recognised NQF qualification. It’s not some handout; it’s work-integrated learning registered with a SETA (Sector Education and Training Authority), blending classroom theory with real workplace grind. I remember my cousin Thabo from Soweto – fresh out of matric with no prospects – he joined an engineering learnership through MERSETA in 2022. A year later, he was a qualified artisan pulling R15k monthly. These programmes target youths (18-35 usually), unemployed South Africans, because government and companies know skills shortages are killing the economy.

No more CVs going into black holes. Learnerships bridge that gap, and with youth unemployment hovering over 40%, they’re popping up everywhere from banks to farms.

Step 1: Hunt Smart for Openings

Don’t just Google “learnerships” and pray – that’s for amateurs. Start with the heavy hitters:

  • SETA websites: There are 21 SETAs covering everything from AgriSETA (farming gigs) to BANKSETA (finance hustles) and INSETA (insurance). Check individual SETA sites like mereseta.org.za for 2026 intakes – some of them are currently opening now with hundreds of spots.
  • Job portals: PNet, Indeed, Careers24, and Careers South Africa (https://www.careerssouthafrica.co.za/) list fresh ones daily. Filter for “learnership” in your province – Gauteng and KZN have the most.
  • Company career pages: Big players like ESKOM, OUTsurance, Sanlam, Samancor Chrome, and Shoprite post their own. Sanlam’s insurance learnership? Matric, 18-35, unemployed – that’s it, stipend included.
  • Government spots: Labour centres via dpsa.gov.za or esa.gov.za, plus NYDA (nyda.gov.za) for rural youth programmes.

Pro tip from the trenches: Join WhatsApp groups like “SA Learnerships 2026” (search Telegram too), follow Careers South Africa on Facebook, and set alerts. My mentee Amahle from KZN snagged an Artisan learnership in early 2026 by spotting it on Careers South Africa first thing Monday morning – applications closed in days.

Step 2: Check If You’re Eligible

Most learnerships want:

  • SA citizen, 18-35, unemployed.
  • Matric (or Grade 10/11/12 for entry-level trades).
  • No prior same qualification (they check SAQA IDs).

Extras? Pure Maths/Science for engineering, or English fluency for call centres. Thabo failed his first application because he missed the “no previous N2” rule – double-check the advert. Rural? Some like INSETA prioritise townships. Got a disability? Many are reserved – declare it proudly.

Step 3: Nail Your Application

This is where most youths flop – sloppy PDFs and ghosted emails. Do it right:

  1. Tailor everything: One-page CV (contact, matric results, ID copy, motivational letter saying why this learnership, not “any job”). No typos – use Grammarly.
  2. Motivation letter magic: “For example you can say: I’m from Alexandra, saw how plumbers earn while fixing leaks in my street. This water reticulation learnership with Rand Water will let me build my community.” Real passion wins.
  3. Submit clean: Online portals? Save as PDF, name it “YourName_Learnership_Programme.pdf”. Email? Subject: “Sipho Nkosi – OUTsurance OSS Learnership 2026”. Attach certified ID, matric cert (not older than 3 months).
  4. Follow up: Call the HR number a week later. “Hi, just confirming receipt of my application for the NECSA Management Learnership.” You will be shocked the HR Manager might check your application right away and this can set you apart from others. Try it!

Lerato’s story? He emailed a bank learnership, followed up, aced the interview with township lingo mixed with matric marks – employed 14 days later.

Common Traps to Dodge

  • Deadlines: They close fast – March 2026 had 300+ nationwide, but spots filled in weeks.
  • Scams: NEVER pay application fees. Legit ones are free.
  • Interviews: Practice STAR (Situation, Task, Action, Result) stories. Dress smart-casual, arrive early.
  • Multiple apps: You’re allowed, but track them in a spreadsheet.

I coached a group of 10 from Gauteng Province last year (yeah, cross-border vibes), and 7 landed spots – persistence pays.

Your Edge as SA Youth

Stay encouraged: Every rejected application is practice. Ready to level up? Follow Careers South Africa at https://www.careerssouthafrica.co.za/ – your ultimate plug for learnerships, bursaries, internships, and youth gigs across SA. They’ve got the freshest listings, application tips, and success stories tailored for you. Hit follow, apply today, and let’s turn that hustle into history. You’ve got this, fam!

Get Connected!

Follow us on our Social Media Handles to remain connected to daily opportunities:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/careerssouthafrica/

Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/careers-south-africa-za/

WhatsApp Group: https://chat.whatsapp.com/JVphaaPQEOU9VBlpVJAtIi?mode=gi_t

WhatsApp Channel: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vb7gAx5J3jupoQfCwt2n