UK workers specialist skills are under threat

-

shutterstock_138717701

UK workers’ specialist skills are under threat as professionals now typically spend at least 10 hours a week – or 65 days a year – on activities outside of their main remit.  A new survey of 2,000 white collar professionals by recruiter PageGroup found that workers’ specialist skills are often being diluted within just two years of them entering a new job. As a result, over half (51%) of the professional workers surveyed now consider themselves to be generalists, despite being employed on the strength of their specialist skills, and a third (31%) report that it has a negative impact on their productivity.

Developing a generalist skill-set is normally associated with promotion and seniority but PageGroup’s research found that ‘responsibility creep’ is starting to seriously affect people’s working lives at all levels. Over a third (38%) reported a negative impact on work-life balance and one in four (25%) feel that increased generalist responsibilities has a negative effect on their motivation levels.

Diluting the specialist skills of the workforce can also impact a business’ ability to innovate, as nearly half (46%) of respondents said that specialist skills lead to increased levels of innovation, whilst 52% believe that specialist skills are needed to improve problem solving.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Oliver Watson, managing director at PageGroup, comments: “In a difficult economy it’s inevitable that people have had to take on extra responsibilities, but the mantra of ‘doing more with less’ cannot continue as a long-term strategy. Giving employees additional tasks outside their main remit can help to broaden their skill-sets and prepare them for senior roles but it’s happening far too quickly in many cases, which is putting specialist skills and business growth at risk.

“If this trend continues, we risk creating a generation of generalists which will undoubtedly hinder individual’s career development, and ultimately damage the UK’s ability to compete effectively in a global economy.”

The move away from specialist skills is already worrying many employees. One in three professionals (33%) are concerned that their company is not hiring enough specialists and even more (38%) believe that the lack of specialist skills in their company is placing unnecessary pressure on them to meet customer demands.

Individuals are also worried about the impact that the switch from ‘specialist’ to ‘generalist’ will have on their own professional development. Almost a third (29%) of those surveyed fear that becoming more generalist will threaten their future job prospects and one in five (19%) think that the continued addition of non-core activities will have a negative effect on their future earning potential.

Watson concludes: “The ideal workplace should have a balance of specialist and business skills but we seem to have reached a tipping point where unique skills are being eroded. In the majority of cases, professionals aren’t even getting any training on their new responsibilities, which is only exacerbating the problem and hampering the workforce’s ability to be productive.

“Businesses need to understand the long-term implications of spreading their workforce too thinly and give employees the chance to excel in their chosen field. If organisations want to have competitive edge, they need to consider ways in which they can harness specialist skills and this needs to start at the point of recruitment and continue right through an individual’s career.”

Latest news

Jobs data reliability questioned after ONS survey mistake

Concerns have emerged over the quality of upcoming labour market figures after a survey error resulted in more than 1,000 interviews being missed.

Sarah Williams: Beyond the traditional interview – redesigning hiring for neurodivergent talent

Neuroinclusive hiring is often treated as a specialist initiative, when it is a fundamentally a capability issue.

Recruitment firms caught up in rise in illegal working penalties

Increased enforcement activity has seen staffing businesses appear on Home Office penalty lists, prompting renewed focus on hiring compliance.

Jensen Huang on staying relevant at work

“Don't get bored and don't get fired.”
- Advertisement -

Amy Speake: Why a cooling job market is the worst time to hire a leader

A slowing labour market should be a hiring manager's dream. But anyone trying to recruit a leader capable of driving real commercial growth will tell you otherwise.

Bezos joins growing pushback against AI jobs apocalypse claims

Tech leaders are increasingly questioning predictions of mass workforce disruption, arguing new tools could expand opportunities and ease skills shortages.

Must read

Darren Timmins: Don’t let stress bowl you out

Here at Otravida we understand how important it is...

Luke Shipley: Balancing the risk with return to work mandates

Is 2025 the year we do away with hybrid working and return to the office full time? Some large enterprises would certainly have you think so.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you