The 10 skills you need to thrive in the Fourth Industrial Revolution
19 Jan 2016
Five years from now, over one-third of skills (35%) that are considered important in today’s workforce will have changed.
By 2020, the Fourth Industrial Revolution
will have brought us advanced robotics and autonomous transport,
artificial intelligence and machine learning, advanced materials,
biotechnology and genomics.
These developments will transform the way we live, and the way we
work. Some jobs will disappear, others will grow and jobs that don’t
even exist today will become commonplace. What is certain is that the
future workforce will need to align its skillset to keep pace.
A new Forum report, The Future of Jobs, looks at the employment, skills and workforce strategy for the future.
The report asked chief human resources and strategy officers from
leading global employers what the current shifts mean, specifically for
employment, skills and recruitment across industries and geographies.
What skills will change most?
Creativity will become one of the top three skills workers will
need. With the avalanche of new products, new technologies and new ways
of working, workers are going to have to become more creative in order
to benefit from these changes.
Robots may help us get to where we want to be faster, but they can’t be as creative as humans (yet).
Whereas negotiation and flexibility are high on the list of skills
for 2015, in 2020 they will begin to drop from the top 10 as machines,
using masses of data, begin to make our decisions for us.
A survey done by the World Economic Forum’s Global Agenda Council
on the Future of Software and Society shows people expect artificial
intelligence machines to be part of a company’s board of directors by
2026.
Similarly, active listening, considered a core skill today, will
disappear completely from the top 10. Emotional intelligence, which
doesn’t feature in the top 10 today, will become one of the top skills
needed by all.
Disruption in industry
The nature of the change will depend very much on the industry
itself. Global media and entertainment, for example, has already seen a
great deal of change in the past five years.
The financial services and investment sector, however, has yet to
be radically transformed. Those working in sales and manufacturing will
need new skills, such as technological literacy.
Some advances are ahead of others. Mobile internet and cloud
technology are already impacting the way we work. Artificial
intelligence, 3D printing and advanced materials are still in their
early stages of use, but the pace of change will be fast.
Change won’t wait for us: business leaders, educators and
governments all need to be proactive in up-skilling and retraining
people so everyone can benefit from the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
The Annual Meeting is taking place in Davos from 20 to 23 January, under the theme “Mastering the Fourth Industrial Revolution”.
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