The need for employee upskilling is on the rise, thanks to the rising adoption of automation, AI, and other emerging technologies.
Employee jobs are transforming. For instance, cab drivers and food delivery employees are expected to follow GPS and reach customers. On the other side, customer demands are also changing: E-commerce has replaced frequent trips to the shopping mall. End-customers want everything on-demand and at the click of a button.
The result? As jobs undergo a metamorphosis, skill sets are no longer under the radar. Employees with outdated skill sets will struggle to keep pace with their jobs.
The lesson: Employee upskilling has emerged as a strategic imperative, with research indicating that for 52% of countries, there's an increased need for matching skills and talent. Furthermore, for 80% of CEOs, the need for new skills has emerged as the biggest business challenge. The way employees work is demanding a new style of learning and development to emerge on the horizon.
While employee upskilling is clearly the immediate ask, there are roadblocks to driving an impactful employee upskilling training program. In this blog, we will explore what these are and how L&D leaders can address the same.
"The urgency of work invariably trumps the luxury of learning." - Harvard Business Review
According to a recent report by Salesforce, a staggering 59% of the US workforce is reporting fewer workplace learning opportunities since the onset of the pandemic. Another study finds that, on average, knowledge workers are able to carve out a mere 5 minutes a day for learning!
Needless to say, one of the biggest reasons why Learning and Development initiatives have gone downhill is lack of time. This is particularly interesting because despite being in an increasingly virtually-driven work environment, employees are still unable to carve out time for learning. The survey suggests that 60% of employees are struggling to fit learning into their already overburdened workday. There's no time to focus on skilling up.
Employees prefer to learn in the flow of the workday and on the job as opposed to dedicating a separate time for learning and development. Instead of asking them to set aside a dedicated time, L&D professionals should integrate learning into the normal workday:
Here are a few tried-and-tested tips to combine on-the-job learning and boost upskilling knowledge retention:
Pro tip: Effective upskilling typically comprises four stages: experience, observation, reflection, and transformation. When devising an employee upskilling/reskilling program comprising formal and informal learning formats, keep these four stages in mind.
In addition to the strategies mentioned above, here are a few best-practices organizations can adopt:
A. Encourage employees to share content internally and drive organic and scalable learning, which may be useful for others as well
B. Use platforms like Slack, Teams, etc. and leverage APIs to integrate relevant content into an employee's everyday work via integrated, learning-oriented apps, such as Zapier
C. Create a dedicated channel for learning and promote it on Slack. Alternatively, enterprises can add a chatbot feature to address employee queries and concerns at the push of a button
Pro tip: To build online assets such as websites and portals, the L&D team needs to engage in good design thinking and leverage cutting-edge technologies to make upskilling learning easily available and accessible.
For employees to be pumped about learning, they first need to be open to the idea of upskilling. However, often, a lack of reinforcing the importance of learning and development by key stakeholders from the top-down can lead to reduced employee engagement.
After all, leadership can have a positive (or negative) impact on all areas of business development, from organizational performance to employee well-being. In the same vein, if the importance of learning opportunities is not being trickled down by the organization leaders and C-suite executives to the employees, the latter will naturally be inclined to view learning and development programs as ad-hoc activities instead of embracing them as a core activity.
The job market is changing at a dynamic pace. On the one hand, job roles are becoming obsolete (read: travel agent, cashier, bank teller, etc.) at an accelerated pace. By contrast, the need for newer skills (read: data analysis, computer science, and information technology) is emerging at a faster pace.
According to a World Economic Forum report, "the window of opportunity to reskill and upskill workers has become shorter." In such a dynamic scenario, here's how leadership can influence the development of robust learning and training programs that employees may readily embrace:
Here's a useful table that demonstrates the key focus areas, leader actions, leadership style, and end results that can be expected from a 360-degree employee-centric approach to L&D programs:
Focus area | Leader action | Leadership style/traits required | Expected end-result |
Gaining employee attention | Expressing training goals with clarity, brevity, and purpose | Charisma + foresightedness | Employees are able to understand the leader's vision and are willing to participate in the leader's long-term mission |
Reinforcing the meaning of upskilling programs | Devising effective communication strategies and communicating consistently about the need for upskilling and/or reskilling | Authority + empathy | Employees are able to get energized by the leader's goals, purpose, and mission statement |
Encouraging employee trust |
Demonstrating the shared goals and vision by self-learning and inspiring others Maintaining consistency of learning purpose at every employee-engagement opportunity |
Inspiration + intellectual simulation | Employees are able to get intellectually stimulated and emotionally involved in adopting the upskilling/reskilling programs |
Managing employee expectations | Encouraging employees to provide real-time feedback on upskilling and reskilling programs and acting on relevant insights to improvise the programs as needed | Compassion + active listening | Employees are able to communicate with honesty and openness and are motivated enough to see personal development initiatives to the end line |
As more and more employees start believing in their integral role towards organizational and personal development, the greater the success of the L&D program and the greater the individual commitment towards building a meaningful and two-way L&D initiative.
Also Read: Why Organizational Learning and Competitive Advantage are Two Sides of the Same Coin
Employees are social beings, and the same is true for learning/upskilling as well. Everyone needs social support and added incentives to learn. In other words, fostering peer collaboration and driving employee-oriented incentives is key to upskilling. This can be done by embracing the following upskilling strategies:
- Practice and apply the new skills learned in day-to-day work
- Engage with peers, create a two-way feedback mechanism, and brainstorm to understand how to proceed if the learner gets stuck
-Collaborate on ongoing projects as well as training programs and learn 'smarter'
- Get assistance from mentors and coaches and put their best foot forward across learning initiatives
Upskilling programs that only serve the organization's purpose are half-baked in nature and will not drive employee participation. The programs need to be aligned with the employee's existing learning needs, or else you risk driving them away - and understandably so.
To create an employee-aligned program, follow these tips and hacks:
For employee upskilling to act as a catalyst for innovation and empowerment, the employees need to be engaged. No matter how good your training program structure (and content is), if you don't have employee buy-in, it is already a catastrophic failure.
To wrap up, follow these best practices and 'upgrade' your employee upskilling programs to forge a winning, employee-obsessed learning culture within your organization: