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E
very region from the Americas
to Asia Pacific is facing the
same problem. This situation
is exacerbated by a truly global and
increasingly mobile workforce that still
remains lacking in the comprehensive
skill set required to be truly valuable
in today’s complex and challenging
economic landscape.
Talent, we believe, is the key to global
economic and political success.
Today’s world is characterised by an
interdependent global economy and
competition for talent on a global scale.
The rate and speed of technology and
knowledge growth is unprecedented
yet there remains a disconnect between
education and industry in how to best
develop the workforce of the future.
In fact, the effectiveness and value of
traditional higher education in doing
so is increasingly being questioned.
The growing role of alternative learning
platforms, stackable certificates, micro-
masters, and specialised learning camps
are increasingly valued and prized
for their efficacy in workforce
development and continuing staff
professional growth.
Bob Athwal
Manny Contomanolis
Trudy Steinfeld
What we see emerging in the world of
talent acquisition is a challenging set of
circumstances that mandates decisive
action on a variety of fronts to better
prepare the graduates of colleges and
universities to contribute, in the most
effective way possible, to problems
apparent in nearly every industry,
business, government, and not-for-profit
sectors across the world.
There are many different ways to
characterise the talent that is needed
for today’s complex economic and
labour force environment. Successful
Higher
education institutions
and systems must play a
bigger and more decisive
role in preparing graduates
to be successful in a rapidly
changing and truly
global world.
The global contributor:
emerging talent acquisition
and the Higher Education
mandate
The long anticipated global talent crisis has perhaps finally become manifest as the latest
ManPowerGroup annual global survey of more than 38,000 employers in 42 countries revealed that
35% of respondents reported difficulty in filling jobs with the right talent. Bob Athwal, University of
Leicester, Manny Contomanolis, Rochester Institute of Technology, US and Trudy Steinfeld, New York
University, US suggest the three competencies to describe every global worker.
18 Graduate Recruiter | www.agr.org.uk
Higher Education
contributors must be multi-talented,
highly skilled, flexible and adaptable.
One of our colleagues at a major
American accounting and consulting
firm noted that, at the heart of it, all
organisations are looking for “GSPs” –
good, smart people. It is the global nature
of the circumstances that we describe
here, however, that prompted us to focus
on the concept of the “global contributor”
as a way of describing the needed
workforce of both today and tomorrow.
Of initial concern, of course, is
determining what skills, competencies
and strengths describe the global
contributor. There has been a tremendous
amount of work in this area and based
on our analysis we have concluded that
there are three interdependent skills
categories that should describe every
worker.
The first of these is are “universal” or
“basic” competencies. These include:
communicating and collaborating;
complex, open-ended, multidisciplinary
problem solving; critical thinking and
judgment; creativity and entrepreneurial
thinking; authenticity and humility; and
innovative use of knowledge, information
and opportunities.
The second is job specific competencies.
Every job and career has specific skills
and competencies which need to be
mastered at a higher level. This is
common, for example, in the professions
such as nursing, law, engineering, and
accountancy.
The third of these, we suggest, are global
competencies. These include: knowledge
of world cultures, regions, and
international issues; the ability to model
the values and perspectives of other
cultures, people, and global realities;
communicating in languages other than
the home language; collaborating with
people from different backgrounds and
value sets; and the ability to use and
process information from different global
sources and diverse contexts.
We believe the global contributor, of
increasing value and importance across
the globe, is described by these three sets
of skills and abilities working together
and applied as appropriate to a given role,
organisation, and industry.
Identifying and articulating desired
competencies is essential in effective
talent acquisition, never more so than
today, as recruiting and hiring is
increasingly focused on skills rather than
schools and competencies rather than
curricula. The already rapid developments
in technology, neuroscience, and data
analytics will significantly enhance the
reliability and effectiveness of testing in
candidate sourcing and selection. The
more traditional forms of sourcing and
recruiting will gradually give way to new
techniques which will focus on skills and
competencies. Those skills and
competencies will also increasingly
include the global set of abilities we have
described. We have already seen a steady
increase, especially in the US and in
Europe, in the number of organisations
that are placing greater value and
emphasis on hiring the global
contributor.
Despite criticism to the contrary, perhaps
one of the most promising developments
is the renewed interest on the part of
higher education in developing global
contributors.
Interest on behalf of hiring organisations
in this kind of talent is necessary but not
sufficient. Higher education institutions
and systems must play a bigger and more
decisive role in preparing graduates to
be successful in a rapidly changing and
truly global world.
While there has always been a level of
focus on the universal and job specific
skills and competency development,
we are beginning to see a number of
developments in global competency
building among colleges and universities.
Institutions, for example, are highlighting
global skill development in career
preparation courses, workshops, and
seminars. Long presumed to be solely
the bailiwick of faculty within academic
programmes, the skill development
content offered in these training and
education programmes is increasingly
important in supplementing the
traditional education experience. This
kind of supplemental programming
also helps raise student awareness of
the global landscape and helps focus
student choices on courses of study
more reflective of their potential
interests. Higher education institutions
are also increasingly looking to partner
with global organisations creating
opportunities for student mentorship,
the development of global internship
and “work abroad” opportunities, and
the ability to better exchange trend data
working together to better understand
and respond to emerging workforce
education challenges and opportunities.
We also see growing evidence of more
focused careers conferences, job fairs,
case, and hackathon styled competitions
designed with an emphasis on global
perspectives, trends, and opportunities.
Emerging assessment strategies and data
analytic capabilities are also allowing
higher education institutions to more
effectively map desired skill development
to specific activities and experiences and,
in doing so, provide richer insights into
the relative value of those skills to career
outcomes and success in both the near-
and long-term.
In short, we believe we may have
reached the critical tipping point
where the pressing concerns in global
talent needs and development may be
creating the best environment and
circumstances for the hiring community
and higher education to bridge the gap
between work force needs and workforce
development. Our conceptualisation of
the global contributor described here
suggests a skill and competency based
framework to help contextualise those
collaboration opportunities and hopefully
contribute to the success of those efforts.
www.agr.org.uk | Graduate Recruiter 19
Global universities

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18-19

  • 1. E very region from the Americas to Asia Pacific is facing the same problem. This situation is exacerbated by a truly global and increasingly mobile workforce that still remains lacking in the comprehensive skill set required to be truly valuable in today’s complex and challenging economic landscape. Talent, we believe, is the key to global economic and political success. Today’s world is characterised by an interdependent global economy and competition for talent on a global scale. The rate and speed of technology and knowledge growth is unprecedented yet there remains a disconnect between education and industry in how to best develop the workforce of the future. In fact, the effectiveness and value of traditional higher education in doing so is increasingly being questioned. The growing role of alternative learning platforms, stackable certificates, micro- masters, and specialised learning camps are increasingly valued and prized for their efficacy in workforce development and continuing staff professional growth. Bob Athwal Manny Contomanolis Trudy Steinfeld What we see emerging in the world of talent acquisition is a challenging set of circumstances that mandates decisive action on a variety of fronts to better prepare the graduates of colleges and universities to contribute, in the most effective way possible, to problems apparent in nearly every industry, business, government, and not-for-profit sectors across the world. There are many different ways to characterise the talent that is needed for today’s complex economic and labour force environment. Successful Higher education institutions and systems must play a bigger and more decisive role in preparing graduates to be successful in a rapidly changing and truly global world. The global contributor: emerging talent acquisition and the Higher Education mandate The long anticipated global talent crisis has perhaps finally become manifest as the latest ManPowerGroup annual global survey of more than 38,000 employers in 42 countries revealed that 35% of respondents reported difficulty in filling jobs with the right talent. Bob Athwal, University of Leicester, Manny Contomanolis, Rochester Institute of Technology, US and Trudy Steinfeld, New York University, US suggest the three competencies to describe every global worker. 18 Graduate Recruiter | www.agr.org.uk Higher Education
  • 2. contributors must be multi-talented, highly skilled, flexible and adaptable. One of our colleagues at a major American accounting and consulting firm noted that, at the heart of it, all organisations are looking for “GSPs” – good, smart people. It is the global nature of the circumstances that we describe here, however, that prompted us to focus on the concept of the “global contributor” as a way of describing the needed workforce of both today and tomorrow. Of initial concern, of course, is determining what skills, competencies and strengths describe the global contributor. There has been a tremendous amount of work in this area and based on our analysis we have concluded that there are three interdependent skills categories that should describe every worker. The first of these is are “universal” or “basic” competencies. These include: communicating and collaborating; complex, open-ended, multidisciplinary problem solving; critical thinking and judgment; creativity and entrepreneurial thinking; authenticity and humility; and innovative use of knowledge, information and opportunities. The second is job specific competencies. Every job and career has specific skills and competencies which need to be mastered at a higher level. This is common, for example, in the professions such as nursing, law, engineering, and accountancy. The third of these, we suggest, are global competencies. These include: knowledge of world cultures, regions, and international issues; the ability to model the values and perspectives of other cultures, people, and global realities; communicating in languages other than the home language; collaborating with people from different backgrounds and value sets; and the ability to use and process information from different global sources and diverse contexts. We believe the global contributor, of increasing value and importance across the globe, is described by these three sets of skills and abilities working together and applied as appropriate to a given role, organisation, and industry. Identifying and articulating desired competencies is essential in effective talent acquisition, never more so than today, as recruiting and hiring is increasingly focused on skills rather than schools and competencies rather than curricula. The already rapid developments in technology, neuroscience, and data analytics will significantly enhance the reliability and effectiveness of testing in candidate sourcing and selection. The more traditional forms of sourcing and recruiting will gradually give way to new techniques which will focus on skills and competencies. Those skills and competencies will also increasingly include the global set of abilities we have described. We have already seen a steady increase, especially in the US and in Europe, in the number of organisations that are placing greater value and emphasis on hiring the global contributor. Despite criticism to the contrary, perhaps one of the most promising developments is the renewed interest on the part of higher education in developing global contributors. Interest on behalf of hiring organisations in this kind of talent is necessary but not sufficient. Higher education institutions and systems must play a bigger and more decisive role in preparing graduates to be successful in a rapidly changing and truly global world. While there has always been a level of focus on the universal and job specific skills and competency development, we are beginning to see a number of developments in global competency building among colleges and universities. Institutions, for example, are highlighting global skill development in career preparation courses, workshops, and seminars. Long presumed to be solely the bailiwick of faculty within academic programmes, the skill development content offered in these training and education programmes is increasingly important in supplementing the traditional education experience. This kind of supplemental programming also helps raise student awareness of the global landscape and helps focus student choices on courses of study more reflective of their potential interests. Higher education institutions are also increasingly looking to partner with global organisations creating opportunities for student mentorship, the development of global internship and “work abroad” opportunities, and the ability to better exchange trend data working together to better understand and respond to emerging workforce education challenges and opportunities. We also see growing evidence of more focused careers conferences, job fairs, case, and hackathon styled competitions designed with an emphasis on global perspectives, trends, and opportunities. Emerging assessment strategies and data analytic capabilities are also allowing higher education institutions to more effectively map desired skill development to specific activities and experiences and, in doing so, provide richer insights into the relative value of those skills to career outcomes and success in both the near- and long-term. In short, we believe we may have reached the critical tipping point where the pressing concerns in global talent needs and development may be creating the best environment and circumstances for the hiring community and higher education to bridge the gap between work force needs and workforce development. Our conceptualisation of the global contributor described here suggests a skill and competency based framework to help contextualise those collaboration opportunities and hopefully contribute to the success of those efforts. www.agr.org.uk | Graduate Recruiter 19 Global universities