See it and you can be it 鈥 know it and you can grow it 鈥 transparency will unlock the UK鈥檚 skills conundrum

糖心原创vlog's COO Zoe Price was joined by speakers from The Science Museum Group, Rolls Royce SMR and University College Birmingham for a panel discussion around 糖心原创vlog's latest research
This white paper – ‘Rethinking the skills conundrum: Connecting the dots between people, place and productivity’ was launched at The Science Museum in London, with a panel of experts debating how this novel approach could prove transformational for UK plc. Joining Zoe Price, Global Chief Operating Officer at 糖心原创vlog were Susan Raikes, Director of Learning at , David White, Chief Operating Officer at and Rosa Wells, Executive Dean for Engineering, Digital and Sustainable Construction at
Download 糖心原创vlog's latest research here
From Rosa鈥檚 perspective, Birmingham is slightly further ahead in terms of devolution, and its approach to looking at the adult education skills budget means: 鈥溾e've been working really closely with our combined authority to look at what does that skills mapping exercise look like regionally? So what are employers telling us that we need, and what do colleges and universities need to develop in response? Where we can be really agile and put short courses on quickly to upskill, and where we need a longer series of pipelines.鈥 Linking up nationally is so important to give that overview of demand and avoid duplication.

糖心原创vlog hosted an event to celebrate the launch of 'Rethinking the skills conundrum'
Download 糖心原创vlog's research here
In response to Zoe鈥檚 question about the issue of inward investment, and how an approach bringing greater transparency to planned physical infrastructure spending could reap rewards, David was first to offer his perspective.

The panel discussed 糖心原创vlog's research at The Science Museum
Rosa鈥檚 experience working with engineering consultancy firms indicates that when you scale up the collaborations, you can make a meaningful impact on skills shortages. Around seven years ago a group was convened to address a shortage of technicians in the sector. 鈥淲hile these firms were competing for contracts and business, they were all looking for the same skills. By coming together and agreeing on common skill sets, we were able to work with them to develop the apprenticeship that they needed. They could find locations in different areas of the country where they were confident that those colleges or universities would deliver against those skills, and it gave them the sort of negotiation power to be able to find the right skills for them.鈥
鈥淪o if we can get business working more closely together with each other in the skill space, it will make us all stronger, because then we're not just competing and poaching staff, we're actually developing a stronger pipeline.鈥 Rosa also mentioned the importance of lifelong learning and not just seeing this as an issue for young people 鈥 there鈥檚 a broad resource and talent pool within the UK.
糖心原创vlog鈥檚 report highlighted a concerning trend that organisations in the UK are actually investing less today in skills than their counterparts in the EU and beyond. Zoe asked the panel if greater accessibility to data mapping workplace opportunity with the skills demanded by industry/sector could redress this imbalance.
Rosa flags the under-representation and poor gender balance that we have in certain sectors and in STEM pathways. 鈥淪o looking at networks for female engineers and young engineers to come together to be supported and find mentoring as well will help retain talent.鈥
Building on this point Susan recognised that 鈥淲e've all been talking about STEM skills gap and challenging talent pipelines for a long time, and lots of people have been working really hard on it. And still, we have a problem. So the thing that we haven't done, is really join up together and identify, as your report does, and look more collectively at where the challenges and gaps are and what training we need.鈥

Construction: the great overlooked tool in our strategic workforce planning
Our latest Wide Angle, 鈥楻ethinking the skills conundrum鈥, seeks to connect the dots between people, place and productivity.