Coeo’s head of digital transformation recently attended a roundtable hosted by the DigiLeaders organisation about “What digital talent looks for” – an important insight about how hiring new staff is changing.
Today, there’s a skills shortage. New companies need digital skills and now so do the previous generations of companies. Right now and over the next few years, businesses will have to change their focus just to remain competitive. Reputation, knowledge and experience only count for so much now. Demonstrating innovation and providing compelling customer experiences are increasingly what keeps them relevant.
The not-for-profit DigiLeaders organisation (link) regularly hosts leadership audience roundtable events on topics related to digital transformation and digital leadership – the people making this once in a generation change happen. Whereas its previous events have focussed on what skills employers need their new staff to have, this event turned the tables and asked what future employees look for when seeking work.
Soon after the session started, I asked how the group defined “digital skills” which led to a show of hands to see who had experience of the following examples of digital skills:
There are of course many definitions of what digital skills are, the list above was just an example designed to show how broad the definition is.
Key observation: Digital skills are not the new name for tech skills or IT skills. People from tech backgrounds often have good digital skills or the right creative personalities to learn new digital skills. But a key observation needs to be that digital is not the new name for IT (or tech). For example, the specialist who redesigns the customer journey from store to web to mobile maybe a psychologist rather than a technologist.
People of any age can have digital skills – but what I learnt was that not enough school children, school leavers or university graduates are leaving the education system with the digital skills employers need. Experienced hires can adapt their existing skillsets to meet the needs of the digital era’s new ways of working, but unless the education system correctly prepares the younger generation, then we’ll end up with people who can’t find the work they trained for while employers who can’t find the staff they need.
Even for people leaving the education system with relevant skills or experienced hires with strong backgrounds, employers are still finding it hard to recruit. In such a competitive marketplace for talent, potential employees are able to choose which employer they work for based on a changing set of criteria. The next few sections share some of the experience that employers at the roundtable gained from their recruitment of digital staff:
What didn’t get mentioned at the roundtable may surprise some – salary and working environment. I suspect there’s a few reasons for this that the employers at the event take for granted. Everyone in the digital industry expects a “good” salary. There’s a skill shortage, so for people with the right skills now isn’t the time to be haggling over money. As for workplace environment, hopefully all of the points above show why. Digital talent wants to go to work to work, albeit exciting and interesting work where they can express their creativity. In the same way they expect a modern job title, they also expect a cool, modern and relaxed working environment (and yes it was confirmed that even the digital teams in banks wear jeans).
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