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How to future-proof your career for the digital revolution

about 1 year ago

How to future-proof your career for the digital revolution

How to future-proof your career for the digital revolution

According to Orla Graham, Deloitte’s chief human resources officer, the workplace of the future will change. The focus will be on greater collaboration, team-working and innovation. It will require a workforce capable of working in diverse teams to do work which is augmented by new technologies that will constantly drive productivity improvement.

These changes will have implications for employers. They will require businesses to be more innovative in getting the best from employees. It will also put pressure on individuals to get used to working in different contexts and modes than in the past.

This will require employees to develop new professional skill sets that include critical thinking, problem-solving, communication, e-leadership and other life, and professional skills to meet the demands of the new workplace.

Constant change

Over the next five years, the adoption of digital technologies will have a major impact on almost all sectors of the Irish workplace, as up to one in three jobs will be disrupted.

The sectors most at risk include agriculture, retail, transport, hospitality and manufacturing, as well as people in low-skilled occupations, according to the Expert Group on Future Skills Needs which, in December, published its predictions for the impact of digitisation on Ireland’s workforce.

The good news, however, is that “the majority of sectors in the Irish economy are expected to be employing more people in 2023 than they did in 2018, with overall employment at levels never witnessed before in Ireland”.

But there will be job losses and those affected will have to upskill and retrain for new roles, some of which have not yet been created.

Educators have been recommending it for years, and the expert group confirms that the concept of lifelong learning, where each individual has an education and training programme they follow throughout their career, will become more of an imperative.

Partnership

According to Tony Donohoe, the head of education and social policy at Ibec, and chairman of the expert group, there needs to be close collaboration between business, government and the higher education sector to ensure the workforce is adaptable, agile and open to learning. The skills learned during formal education will no longer be enough for future careers. Workers will require ongoing education and training.

And, contrary to popular belief, this is not just in the area of technical skills and IT literacy, but also in areas such as leadership, interpersonal skills and business skills.

In addition to that, the future workplace described by Ms Graham will require emotional intelligence, flexibility, adaptive thinking cross-cultural learning and communication skills. With this on the horizon, it’s not a case of if you will invest in your career through continuous professional development(CPD), but how soon can you start.

Five things to look for

1 – Level 

If you opt for a formal course, what level of qualifications do you need? This is regulated by the National Framework of Qualifications. For example, level nine is master’s level;

2 – Credits
Is the course you’re considering credit-bearing or not? What constitutes “credits” is outlined in the European Credit Transfer System and essentially regulates the workload a learner is required to complete in order to get the award;

3 – Industry recognition/accreditation
Many professionals are required to clock up a certain amount of CPD each year to maintain their registration. Be sure the course you are taking is recognised and meets the criteria;

4 – Flexibility
Does the course fit in around your busy schedule? In my experience, the best mode of learning for CPD is blended-learning, which includes online interaction in addition to face-to-face tuition at out-of-office times, such as at weekends or evenings;

5 – Relevance
Is the content driven by your work context and are the competencies you are going to learn applicable in your job? Chose a course with a curriculum driven by research and delivered by experts in the field.

Teaching and learning methods have caught up with the needs of busy professionals, CPD now is a rewarding experience allowing one to develop on a personal level as well as one’s professional acumen. And in a fast-changing work environment, the time to tune in is now.

Abridged version – Source / Copyright: Irish Times – Brían Ó Donnchadha

Photo by NASA

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