As technologies like AI automate manual drudgery work, the impact of automation and digitization on the nature of work cannot be understated. According to McKinsey, a whopping 375 million workers will need to switch occupational categories because of automation.
While the earlier workforce transformation took place over decades, the speed of change today is potentially faster, and broader, covering a significant percentage of mid-career professionals.
Over two-thirds of executives surveyed by McKinsey considered addressing potential skill gaps due to technological change among their top ten business priorities and believe that reskilling and upskilling will help to mitigate talent shortage challenges.
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Thus, the critical challenge for company executives and HR leaders is to figure out how the job roles will change and the kind of talent they will need in the future.
Companies thus need to create an objective career roadmap for distinct roles to provide employees visibility about their future career paths to enable them to plan skills development for the future.
PwC (PricewaterhouseCoopers), for example, has launched a multi-year digital upskilling program to prepare its workforce for the future, which is being replicated by some of its clients as well. The program leverages employees’ existing capabilities and experience and imparts new digital skills through a tailored program to prepare them to face challenges in an uncertain world.
Elsewhere, retail giant Amazon also announced a talent development program to upskill a third of its US employee base by 2025 by spending seven hundred million dollars, enabling them to pursue new opportunities within and outside the company.