Latest
The report, based on a survey of 1,600 English-speaking professionals around the globe, found that many companies have already begun the transition to becoming a skills-based organization. 84% of respondents said their company has at least begun considering how to implement skills-based processes over the next year, and 75% reported their company has already implemented at least one of ten skill-based talent processes, such as in hiring, onboarding, or development. However, the report also found these approaches have not yet permeated deeply into organizations. Employees in talent acquisition and leadership positions are most familiar with skills-based concepts, while employees in individual contributor roles and job seekers are less familiar with these practices. This indicates that there’s room to further integrate skills-based practices across all departments.
“Leading companies are realizing that skills-based approaches can help them overcome the challenges of sourcing qualified talent, while also supporting employees in gaining the skills needed to grow their careers," said
The Workplace 2.0 report has identified several trends and gaps for employers to address as they pursue the broader skills-based transition:
Leaders need new skills to close critical communication gaps.
- 83% of senior leaders say effective leadership will be critical to the skills-based organization transition, but only 28% of all survey respondents report their leadership team is communicating their company’s skills-based organizational strategy and initiatives to employees well.
- 74% of managers have observed changes because of the shift to skills-based strategies, yet nearly a third (32%) of all respondents report they have not seen any changes at all.
- Leaders must focus on developing soft skills to effectively manage skills-based hiring, close critical skills gaps, and build employee trust. Investing in clear communication with employees will increase the impact a skills-based approach can have on employees’ career growth or business success.
Intentional collaboration is essential to creating more equitable and accessible workplaces.
- One of the promises of skills-based organizations is greater advancement of employees based on merit, improving equity among historically marginalized racial groups. Skills-based organizations saw benefits like encouraging continuous learning and skills development (40%) and enhanced opportunities for career advancement based on merit (28%).
- Yet, only 18% of respondents observed improved fairness and equity in the workplace. Just 16% of respondents observed an increase in diversified representation in leadership as a result of skills-based practices.
- Leaders must better involve broad-based stakeholder groups in the strategy process to demonstrate how a skills-based transition contributes to a more equitable and accessible workplace for all employees.
Organizations must invest in skills verification.
- While removing college degree requirements from job listings is often cited as a meaningful benchmark in a company’s skills-based transition, the survey found this is the least common strategy employed by skills-based organizations.
- To replace a deeply-rooted traditional measurement of work readiness like the college degree, organizations must be confident they can evaluate an employee’s or job seeker’s abilities without relying on degrees to verify job readiness, leveraging other tools such as third-party badging or IT certification to validate skillsets.
“Skills-based organizations offer many opportunities to create equity within the workplace,” said
To learn more about how organizations can partner with Udemy Business to support a skills-based transition, visit: business.udemy.com.
About
Methodology
In
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20240604123921/en/
Media
Director of Thought Leadership
press@udemy.com
Investor
Vice President, Investor Relations
dennis.walsh@udemy.com
Source: