Research commissioned by Reed.co.uk found that over half of employers (60 per cent) are receiving more applications from candidates who have come from different industries.
Canvassing over 250 hiring decision-makers across the UK, the research reflects an increasing awareness of transferable skills and an appetite for reskilling among jobseekers. The news comes after Reed.co.uk reported 140,000 courses were purchased in the first half of November last year – a 786 per cent rise year-on-year – as workers reevaluate their skillset in light of the pandemic and look to identify new opportunities for personal development.
Despite the wider range of talent available to businesses, some employers remain rigid about their expectations of applicants. Over half (60 per cent) of hiring decision-makers still believe it is important for applicants to have a university education, shrinking the potential talent pool from which they can recruit.
Hiring managers within the construction and technology sectors – who report more labour shortages than those from any other industries in the survey – are also the most likely to believe a university education is important for candidates. Whereas employers in real estate (17 per cent) and creative industries (33 per cent) placed the least importance on applicants having a university education.
Alongside a university education, the research also finds that employers increasingly value soft skills, such as teamwork and interpersonal skills, as a result of the shift to remote working. Nearly two-thirds (64 per cent) of hiring decision-makers agree.
While a university education and soft skills are desirable for a candidate, some employers may need to become more flexible about their expectations, especially as over half (55 per cent) of the businesses surveyed report labour shortages in their sector.
To solve existing labour shortages, employers may also need to improve their overall job offering. In a recent Reed.co.uk whitepaper, Navigating the ’Great Resignation’: what workers want, which surveyed over 2,000 full or part-time employed workers, Reed.co.uk found that 41 per cent of people are actively looking for a new job, with salary (39 per cent), flexible working (31 per cent) and more perks and benefits (29 per cent) being the main motivating factors.
“In 2021, the UK economy started its long road to recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic,” comments Simon Wingate, managing director of reed.co.uk. “Shops and restaurants reopened, we pulled ourselves out of a recession and now we are in the middle of a jobs boom where there are more opportunities than ever. If businesses are to find the candidates to sustain the economic recovery and workers are to find new opportunities in alternative sectors, then both will need to find creative solutions to improve their recruitment prospects.
“It’s encouraging to see that many workers are already learning new skills to improve their career opportunities,” he added. “However, employers should be more flexible when it comes to hiring, by looking at workers who haven’t got qualifications but who are willing to learn and have useful transferable skills for a modern working environment. By sticking to a rigid, old-fashioned approach to recruiting, you could be discarding talent that could help fuel your growth plans in 2022.”