Forum Institutional

How skills-based organizations can use AI to create the jobs of tomorrow

This image shows engineers working with robotic equipment to illustrate the jobs of tomorrow

Can technology help us predict the jobs of tomorrow? Image: Photo by ThisisEngineering RAEng on Unsplash

Aneel Bhusri
Co-CEO, Co-Founder and Chair, Workday
This article is part of: World Economic Forum Annual Meeting

Listen to the article

  • Traditionally, employees were matched to roles based on their qualifications and organizational reporting structures, as opposed to individual skills and interests.
  • Now, businesses are rethinking the future of work, redefining the employer-employee relationship and preparing for the jobs of tomorrow.
  • Together, the public and private sectors can work to establish standards and policies that ensure new technologies, such as AI and ML, drive human progress, create job opportunities for our future workforce and grow our economies.

The world of work as we once knew it no longer exists. For years, work was a static concept and narrowly defined. That notion has given way to a far more dynamic and rapidly evolving model fueled by the rise in hybrid and remote work, emerging technologies and increasing economical and societal factors.

At the centre of this shift is today’s workforce. Companies used to manage their talent with a focus on traditional degrees and linear career progression. But that approach no longer works, given the heightened focus on the employee experience combined with how fast the nature of jobs is evolving. In fact, Dell Technologies predicts that 85% of the jobs in 2030 haven’t been invented yet.

Have you read?

To navigate the speed and scale of this new reality and help prepare for the jobs of tomorrow, it’s imperative for organizations to adopt a skills-based mindset driven by the power of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML).

Here’s what today's leaders need to focus on as the changing world of work won’t wait.

Shift the way you think about talent

Skills-based organizations will lead the future of work. Shifting to a skills-based approach helps organizations hire and retain the right talent and enables them to upskill their existing talent to meet the needs of today’s digital world. According to a recent study by Amazon and Workplace Intelligence, almost 80% of employees in the US today are concerned that they lack the skills needed for the jobs of tomorrow, while 58% of employees believe their skills have gone stale since the pandemic.

Organizations must evolve how they think about the concept of work, moving away from the rigid idea that work is done through structured job roles and responsibilities, instead viewing work as a more fluid compilation of skills to be leveraged as the world around us changes. The resulting impact, as noted by Deloitte, is that skills-based organizations are more agile and more competitive, vital to succeeding in this new landscape.

Lean in to innovation

Fundamental to delivering on this shift to a skills-based approach are technologies, such as AI and ML, which can understand key attributes to help drive automation and provide insights and predictions that help to identify and align skills with jobs, quickly turning employee data into a strategic advantage, while helping businesses adapt to change.

Forward-looking companies recognize the benefits of these technologies in driving a skills-based workforce. Consulting firm, Booz Allen Hamilton, for example, shared its take on the power of AI to support this shift and its capacity to unlock more access to opportunities for internal candidates, uncover previously unseen skills matches and tap into a more diverse talent pool.

At Workday, we developed Career Hub. This helps our employees share skills and interests and receive relevant connections, curated learning content and recommended jobs to help them on their career journeys. Using ML, Career Hub provides workers with suggestions to grow their skills and capabilities and encourages them to build a plan as they explore opportunities for continued career development. At a time when the employee experience is becoming a business imperative, offering employees an opportunity for internal mobility and advancement, while also listening to what employees have to say, is mission-critical to retaining talent and driving overall business success.

Loading...

Support smart policy

In a fragmented world, technology can be the great equalizer. But progress towards a skills-based workforce cannot be sustained without meaningful policies that embrace responsible approaches to AI and ML. Those policy discussions must include all stakeholders, including the companies developing these technologies, to ensure businesses are prepared for the road ahead.

AI and ML technology can fundamentally improve the way we work and foster greater equality in accessing opportunity, but in the face of such a profound technological and societal change, it’s vital that we commit to an ethical compass. At Workday, we follow four key principles that guide how we develop and utilize AI and ML technologies responsibly and work to address its broader societal impact. One of those principles is putting people first.

Together, the public and private sectors can work to establish standards and policies that ensure new technologies, such as AI and ML, drive human progress, create job opportunities for our future workforce and grow our economies. The time to go all in is now.

Have you read?
    Don't miss any update on this topic

    Create a free account and access your personalized content collection with our latest publications and analyses.

    Sign up for free

    License and Republishing

    World Economic Forum articles may be republished in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License, and in accordance with our Terms of Use.

    The views expressed in this article are those of the author alone and not the World Economic Forum.

    Stay up to date:

    Education

    Related topics:
    Forum InstitutionalEducation and Skills
    Share:
    The Big Picture
    Explore and monitor how Education is affecting economies, industries and global issues
    World Economic Forum logo

    Forum Stories newsletter

    Bringing you weekly curated insights and analysis on the global issues that matter.

    Subscribe today

    Davos 2025: How to follow the Annual Meeting on our digital channels

    Beatrice Di Caro

    December 17, 2024

    The other 51 weeks: what happens before and after Davos?

    About us

    Engage with us

    • Sign in
    • Partner with us
    • Become a member
    • Sign up for our press releases
    • Subscribe to our newsletters
    • Contact us

    Quick links

    Language editions

    Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

    Sitemap

    © 2024 World Economic Forum