Employee Skilling
Want people to be engaged with their work? Make sure they know how to do it

Studies show employee disengagement largely stems from uncertainty—about job security, AI replacing roles, and skills becoming obsolete.
That we will barely have time to become proficient in a complex technical skill before it is obsolete and we have to start learning something new from scratch all over again.
Malcom Gladwell's 10,000 hour theory has been pretty well debunked for most professions, but it is a fact that proficiency or expertise - let alone mastery - takes time. A well-designed learning syllabus, a skilled trainer, or individual capability can shorten the process, but people still need practice to take that learning beyond basic level: to do the work more quickly and accurately, to more efficiently identify and correct errors, to see, understand, and implement new and more effective ways of doing something.
What's missing from most conversations around skills right now is the intersection between that effectiveness, and people's level of engagement with their work.
On the other hand, as people gain the skills - or access to resources - that make them more effective at the task, and especially if they can observe their own improvement, their engagement levels will increase correspondingly.
This is a subset of Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's flow theory, the idea that when someone is carrying out an activity that matches their capabilities and has clear objectives and feedback, their engagement will peak.
In a workplace setting, this can translate to a few outcomes: most or all workers are not very effective at their tasks but they are engaged with the work, some are highly proficient and some are not proficient and they are disengaged when working together, or most are proficient and also engaged with the work.
When employee engagement is a KPI for the HR function, though, closing that skill gap between proficient and less proficient workers takes on additional importance.
Multiple studies have shown that much of the employee disengagement recorded in recent months comes from lack of knowledge about what actually is happening to their jobs, and lack of certainty around whether they will be able to continue doing their jobs - not just because they might be replaced by AI, but because they are not sure whether they can pick up the new skills required to do the job.
Some people do thrive on constant intensive change, and for them, reskilling and upskilling is hugely engaging. But for most, just being able to do their job with a reasonable level of proficiency and to retain stable employment in the process will keep most people considerably more engaged than the prospect of redundancy every six months as a new buzzword appears on the market.
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Did you find this article insightful? People Matters Perspectives is the official LinkedIn newsletter of People Matters, bringing you exclusive insights from the People and Work space across four regions and more. Read the previous editions here, and keep an eye out for the upcoming August edition rolling-out soon.
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