“HR leaders are finding it increasingly difficult to quickly find and develop talent with the most in demand skills, yet 58% of the workforce needs new skills to get their jobs done.”
Gartner TalentNeuron data shows the total number of skills required for a single job has been increasing by 10% year-over-year since 2017.
One in three skills in an average 2017 job posting in IT, finance or sales are already obsolete. Emerging skills gaps due to ongoing business disruption and rapidly evolving needs have accelerated as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Many organizations have focused on talent acquisition to get the skills they need, however a 2020 Gartner survey revealed that 74% of organizations froze hiring in response to COVID-19,” said Alison Smith, director in the Gartner HR practice.
“In today's environment, hiring is not possible for many organizations. Instead, companies can look at current employees who have skills closely matched to those in demand and utilize training to close any gaps.”
When considering skills adjacencies, to address skills needs, HR leaders should do the following:
- Increase transparency of current employee skill sets
- Identify and mobilize nonobvious skills adjacencies
- Adjust career pathing strategies to encourage flexible career progression
Gain better insight into employee skill sets
- HR leaders need to collect information on current employee skill sets and use this to map out secondary and tertiary skills.
- Focus on collecting key skills data that is just comprehensive enough to allow them to easily keep it current.
Employees and their managers must be empowered and encouraged to main a portfolio of skills that are visible to HR, which will then enable HR to maintain a current view of skills for the organization.
Understand and prioritize skills adjacencies
- For critical skills, determine which secondary or tertiary skills to begin building upon.
- Use machine learning and large data to identify and unlock the power of skills adjacencies at scale.
- Partner with your data science teams to ground upskilling efforts in current knowledge of employee capabilities and prioritize immediate skills application.
Encourage flexible career progression
Traditional career frameworks rely on the assumption that roles will remain relatively unchanged for years and move in a ladder-like trajectory. As skills adjacencies begin to uncover new connections and career options, career paths will need to be more fluid and unrestricted by traditional roles and skills requirements.
“Career paths need to be flexible enough to enable employees to move around in — often unconventional — ways that allow the organization to best leverage employees’ skills adjacencies,” said Smith.
“Uncoupling employees’ concept of ’progress’ away from just roles and titles empowers employees to be dynamic and ready to change course as the organization needs.”