2/13/2025
Irja Rae, Figure Baltic partner
Clearly, the focus is increasingly shifting to skills as a new competitive advantage in the labour market. Should the skills to focus on be critical and necessary today, or looking to the future? Answers are provided by a recent Harvard Business Review article, "Learning Emerging Skills Doesn't Always Pay Off", which provides clear guidance and practical recommendations for employees and employers alike.
The emphasis: core skills, not future trends.
While the labour market is evolving rapidly and new skills are constantly being added, HBR stresses that focusing on core skills is five times more effective in improving employee performance than learning 'future skills' that have no immediate application.
Why less is more?
In our fast-paced world, which is changing almost daily, it is easy to fall into the trap of trying to acquire as many new skills as possible in the hope that they will increase one's value in the labour market. However, often these skills may not be immediately applicable, and so initially remain rather theoretical knowledge, which may remain so as the dust settles. Herein lies an important distinction between basic skills and future skills.
Skills without practical application often remain abstract and do not really add value to the employee. In contrast, the development of basic skills yields immediate results and improves day-to-day performance.
How can we focus on what matters?
For employers and employees alike, it is important to take a strategic approach to skills development that takes into account the needs of both the organisation and the employee. I offer some practical suggestions:
Less is more
In skills development, it is not always quantity that matters, but quality. Strengthening basic skills is the most effective way for workers to remain competitive in the labour market and for employers to boost their performance by developing talent capital. Future skills are important, but their inclusion in the training curriculum needs to be targeted and well thought through. Without sufficient practice, a skill will not develop - at best, it will only develop theoretical knowledge.