A recent study by Gartner Group reports that nearly two-thirds of HR leaders proactively address their organization’s skills needs at a time when the number of skills in the workplace has been increasing by a rate of 10% annually.
At the same time, dynamic business conditions make reskilling a continuously moving target. A third of the skills that were considered necessary three years ago are no longer relevant, the firm said. Despite training efforts and significant investments, workers apply just 54% of the new skills they learn.
Other studies reinforce reskilling challenges and inefficiencies:
Gartner research also highlighted the challenges associated with a predictive approach to anticipating future needed skills, finding that when HR tries to forecast which skills will be needed down the road, employees use only 37% of the new skills they learn.
Gartner proposes “a dynamic skills approach” to skills-management in which HR and the wider organization is structured in a way that helps HR monitor trends and develop skills at the time they’re needed. At the same time, it allows employees to make better decisions about what training they need.
Gartner claims that the dynamic skills approach enables workers to apply 75% of their new knowledge to their jobs, as opposed to 54%. In addition, companies can see a 24% improvement in employee performance.