Personally I am not a fan of the pre apprenticeship programs. Ideally try to get an electrical contractor willing to start an apprentice but those are getting quite rare, and those that do often hire 3-4 kids and then offer the best performer an apprenticeship.
I went to University first, then started my electrical apprenticeship because an undergraduate degree is not going to open too many doors. I knew the contractor and actually worked for him a few summers as a ground man, and truck driver (IBEW 105). The great thing about the trades is that they can never take that certification away, you are not tied to any employer as your skills are all transferable inside and outside of the trade. I worked on the tools for 11 years then transferred to sales and to be honest I have never looked back. I have worked for Eaton, GE, & Schneider and did everything from technical sales rep, business develop manager, channel manager, specification manager, sales manager, and now I manage a technical sales team in Canada, US, and Mexico. So staying on the tools is a solid option but there are many many opportunities once you learn the ropes. Sales has it's challenges - travel, working outside of the 8-5 routine, working with non technical people, but offers great compensation, holidays, and benefits like golf, customer fishing/hunting trips, company vehicle (with gas card), & expense account but it is not for everyone.
My preference would be a small to medium company in the commercial/industrial segment (309D). This would give you experience in all facets of a project, service, and maintenance. I have been on many large job sites (data centers, LNG Plants) that have 600, 1,000 or 1,200 electricians. With that many guys it is easy to get lost in the shuffle and many I see get stuck on a crew that could install conduit or ladder tray for over a year, or do nothing but pull cable. It is important to touch a little bit of everything and hone ones skills at pipe bending, pulling cable, terminations, tying in panels (and how to balance loads in panels), industrial control, PLC, and trouble shooting.
Everywhere I go in the US and Canada electrical contractors are crying for electricians but reluctant to start an apprentice and opt for that 2nd or 3rd year that has some experience - that seems to be the sweet spot I see right now.
Good luck and keep knocking on doors