The Growing Jobs Skills Gap … That No One’s Talking about

The Growing Jobs Skills Gap … That No One’s Talking about

"Facebook? I use that everyday. Who needs to be trained in it?" Employee sentiment like this has quickly become the stuff of nightmares for companies today. Why? While businesses are racing head-on into the social media arena, the contemporary workforce is still seriously ill-equipped to help unlock its value.

And that value is simply enormous. An estimated three-quarters of consumers now say social media influences their buying decisions. Nearly 90 percent of US companies are currently using Twitter, Facebook, and other networks—all jockeying for their share of the estimated $1.3 trillion in value that social media stands to unlock.

So while social media races ahead, formal training and education programs are lagging seriously behind. In fact, only a meager 12 percent of the 2,100 companies in a 2010 Harvard Business Review survey said they're using social media effectively. And more recent research by Capgemini and others show that confidence gaining only incrementally.

More proof this is a serious problem: Reports of social media gaffes and blunders in the workplace are still prevalent. (Remember that US Airways social media disaster?) Meanwhile, the real price of the skills gap often goes unnoticed—billions of dollars in missed opportunities and lost revenue.

So what’s behind the growing social media skills gap?

The clearest culprit for this lag is the breakneck proliferation of new platforms and features. Around a year ago, Snapchat was still a toy for teens to trade disappearing messaging; today it's the latest way to reach young customers on their own turf. As more platforms incorporate more sophisticated features, even the most plugged-in users are struggling to keep up.

At the same time, how social media is used in the workplace is fundamentally changing. Just a few years ago, social media in the office was the domain of specialized social media managers, the gatekeepers who owned a company’s public face on the leading platforms. In a short time, however, social media duties have been radically democratized and decentralized. The number of job descriptions on job search sites mentioning social media skills is booming.

Since then, employees have been asked to use social media in ever more numerous and unfamiliar ways. The standard marketing functions are just the tip of the iceberg. Social tools are being used to streamline customer service, drive sales, improve HR processes, and build employee brand advocacy programs.

Meanwhile, platforms like Facebook at Work (in beta now and expected to roll out this year) and Slack (which boasts millions of users, from NASA to your corner coffee shop) are quickly changing how workers collaborate. By bringing social messaging inside the office, these technologies are breaking down silos and boosting productivity. Social media is no longer a discrete thing that certain people do in certain jobs, and more of an integral component of work itself.

But this approach only works if employees are on board and up to speed. "The real problem is that we expect people to know these skills without providing any training," William Ward, professor of social media at Syracuse University, told me. Social media know-how isn’t something you just pick up as a casual user. And it isn't just older employees who are in the dark—millennial hires need training, too.

"Because somebody grows up being a social media native, it doesn’t make them an expert in using social media at work," Ward says. "That’s like saying, ‘I grew up with a fax machine, so that makes me an expert in business.’"

How do we fix the problem?

Bridging this social skills gap is no small task. In the long term, social media coursework is slowly being incorporated into university programs, and not just for students pursuing marketing and communications degrees. Here at Hootsuite, for instance, we've developed a social media syllabus that's now being used in more than 400 universities around the world by 30,000 students. Programs like these offer a foundation of social media skills for the workplace and may one day be as commonplace as introductory college writing and computer skills classes.

But what about employees struggling right now with the growing demands of social business? The good news is that companies are beginning to acknowledge social media literacy as a critical job skill (just like Internet and basic computer literacy back in the day) and are starting to offer on-the-job training programs. Altimeter reports that almost half of the companies it surveyed are planning on rolling out some kind of internal social education program for employees, while overall spending on corporate training is on a serious upswing, rising 15% in the U.S. in a recent year to $70 billion.

The challenge, of course, is how to teach social media in such a mercurial environment. In the last year alone, for instance, we’ve seen the rise of "social video" and a whole new crop of one-to-one messaging apps, while Twitter has struggled to reinvent itself.

But few employees have time for in-depth courses or bootcamps. Ultimately, the right training solution needs to be on-demand and mobile-friendly. Currently, some of the best paid options are coming not from traditional educational sources, but from companies immersed in the social and digital media space, offering real lessons from the front lines. (Hootsuite’s own online course, Podium, is one free alternative, with 50,000 users and counting.)

Ultimately, though, any investment in upgrading social media skills in the workplace is likely to be money well spent. A whopping 2 billion people are now on social media (nearly a third of the planet's population). Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and other networks aren’t going away. Social business has become business as usual. Indeed, social media budgets at companies are expected to double in the next five years.

To avoid throwing good money after bad, companies need to ensure that their employees actually know how to use new and emerging social technologies. Those that succeed in closing the social media skills gap will discover new ways to reach and retain customers, engage and recruit employees, and boost productivity. Those that fail will miss out on their chunk of a multitrillion-dollar pie, and might not be around long enough to regret it.

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Marc Cameron

Corporate communication is how business engages with humanity.

8y

Great post Ryan. As a social collaboration practitioner (a wha..?) at moderately-huge titan of an institution trying to compete with new, nimble, and shiny disruptotrons, your insights resonate with me. But for one thing: junior and middle management is, in fact, talking about it. Blue-in-the-face about it. The C-Suite (heck, even most of the V-Suite) isn't listening. Social media know-how represents a far bigger shift in corporate culture than just getting employees to be trusted brand ambassadors on Periscope, or using Jive for ideation or whatever. Network Leadership is now the name of game, and very few corporate leaders get that or understand the implications for their careers and their legacies.

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James Nickerson

Senior Director Of Communications and Public Relations

8y

Great piece, Ryan. I teach Social Media Bootcamp Basics and Advanced at General Assembly in San Francisco, and am always amazed at the large sizes and diverse demographics of my classes.

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John Ladasky

Systems Engineer at ThinkCyte

8y

If you want to reach consumers, whom I know are responsible for two thirds of the spending in the American economy, a focus on social media is clearly important. However, consumers buy a lot of fluff. If non-consumers (businesses, governments) are also making their purchasing decisions based on social media, that means that our society is in big trouble.

Michael Miloserdoff

In-Office Candidate ! - Sr. Manual QA Analyst Lead with Legacy, SAAS, web-based and web-legacy hybrid platforms.

8y

I would like to restate that it is not that employees have little time, it is that corporate management at the highest levels do not see a need to have such training reprioritized to a higher level; after all, it is the corporate management that sets rank-and-file employee priorities. The companies that seem to be adapting to emerging technologies and better ways of doing things are the smaller companies (see United Parcel Service, Wall Street giving thumbs down because they have failed to adopt new capital investment-intensive technologies).

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Pete Forsyth

Wikipedia expert. I can help you find ethical and effective strategies for improving Wikipedia articles.

8y

Ryan, I'm a bit unclear: Are you talking about the technical skills of knowing how to manage social media channels? Or the ability to make sophisticated judgments about good messaging? Or both? It seems to me they are very different skill sets, and that you'd want a very different approach to train for each (one being more related to IT skills, the other more related to PR skills).

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