Preparing for the future with new skilling for growth

August 2019 Editor's Choice, Training & Education

Today’s workforce is unable to regularly refresh the knowledge and skill levels needed to capitalise on new challenges and opportunities. This situation threatens to worsen over time unless organisations embrace new digital technologies such as machine learning and artificial intelligence

that can proactively offer the workforce an entirely new, future-oriented learning experience.

Kirtan Sita
Kirtan Sita

Using artificial intelligence to capitalise on the exploding amount of available data, for example, can provide personalised, role-based and competency-based learning and performance support in near real time, at scale across the organisation – something that Accenture calls ‘new skilling’. The implications are revolutionary: a workforce that can adapt readily to anything thrown its way. You can’t after all, have an agile business without an agile workforce.

Our research shows that if South Africa can double the pace at which its workforce acquires skills relevant for human-machine collaboration, it can reduce the number of jobs at risk from 20 percent (3.5 million jobs) in 2025 to just 14 percent (2.5 million jobs). But for such an intervention to be effective, we must start now.

Business leaders know that thriving in the digital age requires them to take on the disruptive forces changing their industry with speed, confidence, and bold new bets. Nothing less than a similarly bold approach to new skilling will prepare the workforce to support an organisation’s need for continuous innovation and growth.

This is a far cry from much of traditional enterprise learning that tends to focus on monitoring, compliance and activity tracking. Enhancements are incremental in nature and constrained by existing approaches. By contrast, new skilling programmes are driven by innovation – aligned with dynamic business objectives and designed to improve business performance.

By adopting a zero-based mindset, leading companies can take a clean-sheet approach to redesigning the learning organisation with clear objectives in mind – for example, reducing time to implementation and improving speed to competency. Resources can be shifted from initiatives that aren’t contributing to desired business outcomes to ones that will.

Human beings have an amazing capacity to learn new skills and adapt to new environments. This is true not only in early life, but throughout our lives. As the nature of work evolves – i.e., becoming more digital and human, cooperative and collaborative, knowledge and task-based, flexible and fluid – employees will need to adapt their mix of skills and knowledge to embrace new challenges and stay relevant. Organisations will also need to create learning environments that enable employees to adapt.

Leaders need to accelerate reskilling people, pivot the workforce to areas that create new forms of value and strengthen the talent pipeline from its source. The good news is that these actions will enable leaders to build a workforce that is highly engaged with digital and to reshape their organisations and society at large in a way that drives real business value – labour productivity, talent acquisition and retention, as well as innovation and creativity. To achieve this, leaders need to be responsive, responsible and ‘response-abled’.

The bad news is that the clock is ticking and the time to act is now. Companies need to increase the speed at which they reskill their workforce. They would need to prioritise skills for development, reskill at the top of the house, keep building on what they have, change the mindset to ‘learning as a way of life’, use digital to learn digital, and tap into boomers for a knowledge boost. This will position the organisation and its people to win in this newest revolution.

Industry players are however asking many questions such as: Will there be enough skills and jobs to fill our time? Will working for money be replaced by working for meaning? In the future, will jobs be fewer and work weeks shorter, and will jobs be shared? The answers are already apparent.

We will need new skills now to be able to compete in the future. We will not only do things differently, we will do different things. New industries will emerge. But the future trajectory of countries will, by and large, be determined by how they ensure economic access for all to build a consumer class with the purchasing power to spend on the goods and services that businesses produce with the aid of machines.





Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

AI-enabled tools reducing time to value and enhancing application security
Editor's Choice
Next-generation AI tools are adding new layers of intelligent testing, audit, security, and assurance to the application development lifecycle, reducing risk, and improving time to value while augmenting the overall security posture.

Read more...
2024 State of Security Report
Editor's Choice
Mobile IDs, MFA and sustainability emerge as top trends in HID Global’s 2024 State of Security Report, with artificial intelligence appearing in the conversation for the first time.

Read more...
Cyberthreats facing SMBs
Editor's Choice
Data and credential theft malware were the top two threats against SMBs in 2023, accounting for nearly 50% of all malware targeting this market segment. Ransomware is still the biggest threat.

Read more...
Are we our own worst enemy?
Editor's Choice
Sonja de Klerk believes the day-to-day issues we face can serve as opportunities for personal growth and empowerment, enabling us to contribute to creating a better and safer environment for ourselves and South Africa.

Read more...
How to spot a cyberattack if you are not a security pro
Editor's Choice
Cybersecurity awareness is straightforward if you know what to look for; vigilance and knowledge are our most potent weapons and the good news is that anyone can grasp the basics and spot suspicious activities.

Read more...
Protecting IP and secret data in the age of AI
Editor's Choice
The promise of artificial intelligence (AI) is a source of near-continuous hype for South Africans. However, for enterprises implementing AI solutions, there are some important considerations regarding their intellectual property (IP) and secret data.

Read more...
Super election year increases risks of political violence
Editor's Choice
Widening polarisation is expected in many elections, with terrorism, civil unrest, and environmental activism risks intensifying in a volatile geopolitical environment. Multinational businesses show an increasing interest in political violence insurance coverage in mitigation.

Read more...
Enhance control rooms with surveillance and intelligence
Leaderware Editor's Choice Surveillance Mining (Industry)
Dr Craig Donald advocates the use of intelligence and smart surveillance to assist control rooms in dealing with the challenges of the size and dispersed nature common in all mining environments.

Read more...
A long career in mining security
Technews Publishing Editor's Choice Security Services & Risk Management Mining (Industry)
Nash Lutchman recently retired from a security and law enforcement career, initially as a police officer, and for the past 16 years as a leader of risk and security operations in the mining industry.

Read more...
A constant armed struggle
Technews Publishing XtraVision Editor's Choice Integrated Solutions Mining (Industry) IoT & Automation
SMART Security Solutions asked a few people involved in servicing mines to join us for a virtual round table and give us their insights into mine security today. A podcast of the discussion will be released shortly-stay tuned.

Read more...