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65. Overcoming Skill Gaps

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Content provided by BizLibrary. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by BizLibrary or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This week, we welcome back Katie Miller, who appeared in early episodes to discuss the job search process from a candidate's perspective. Katie presented at ALIGN, our client conference, where she discussed overcoming skill gaps.
Skill gaps are the difference between the skills you need your employees to master, and their actual level of mastery. If the discrepancy becomes too large, employees may become unable to achieve their job functions.
There are two ways to overcome the skill gaps that exist in any given organization - hire employees from outside who possess the skills you need, or train skills in your existing workforce to a level that fits your organizational needs.
Hiring from outside presents a risk - first, there is time and money spent identifying viable candidates, and ensuring that their skills match the skills you are seeking. Second, even preliminary tests can be faulty, meaning that the candidate you take on may not have the level of mastery in any given skill.
Training your existing workforce has its own challenges, but saves both time and money.
Effectively training your employees requires a strong strategy, and one of the first steps is to conduct a skills gap analysis.
In the episode, we used a podcast host as an example. Our podcast host must have strong interview skills. We categorized this skill two ways: first, we measured on a scale of one to five how important this skill is to the success of the host. We decided that interview skills are a key attribute and gave it the importance of five out of five.
Next, we analyzed the actual interviewing skill of our fictional host. We gave the host a 3/5 - meaning that more mastery is needed.
Deciding what skills you need, and determining what levels currently exist can go a long way in helping you prioritize how you train individuals in your workforce!
Thanks for listening to The BizLibrary Podcast! When you're finished listening, be sure to download our free related resource!
We'll see you next week!

  continue reading

30 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 310647046 series 3066373
Content provided by BizLibrary. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by BizLibrary or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

This week, we welcome back Katie Miller, who appeared in early episodes to discuss the job search process from a candidate's perspective. Katie presented at ALIGN, our client conference, where she discussed overcoming skill gaps.
Skill gaps are the difference between the skills you need your employees to master, and their actual level of mastery. If the discrepancy becomes too large, employees may become unable to achieve their job functions.
There are two ways to overcome the skill gaps that exist in any given organization - hire employees from outside who possess the skills you need, or train skills in your existing workforce to a level that fits your organizational needs.
Hiring from outside presents a risk - first, there is time and money spent identifying viable candidates, and ensuring that their skills match the skills you are seeking. Second, even preliminary tests can be faulty, meaning that the candidate you take on may not have the level of mastery in any given skill.
Training your existing workforce has its own challenges, but saves both time and money.
Effectively training your employees requires a strong strategy, and one of the first steps is to conduct a skills gap analysis.
In the episode, we used a podcast host as an example. Our podcast host must have strong interview skills. We categorized this skill two ways: first, we measured on a scale of one to five how important this skill is to the success of the host. We decided that interview skills are a key attribute and gave it the importance of five out of five.
Next, we analyzed the actual interviewing skill of our fictional host. We gave the host a 3/5 - meaning that more mastery is needed.
Deciding what skills you need, and determining what levels currently exist can go a long way in helping you prioritize how you train individuals in your workforce!
Thanks for listening to The BizLibrary Podcast! When you're finished listening, be sure to download our free related resource!
We'll see you next week!

  continue reading

30 episodes

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