UK vertical industries facing digital skills gap, yet only half willing to spend to boost talent

UK vertical industries facing digital skills gap, yet only half willing to spend to boost talent

Research conducted by Censuswide in September 2022 surveyed 300 HR decision-makers within the technology, finance, ecommerce and retail industries (100 per industry). The findings revealed that cybersecurity, software architecture and data analysis are facing the biggest lack of skilled workers in vertical industries, yet investment in recruitment and L&D remains low.

New research from O’Reilly, a premier source for insight-driven learning on technology and business, has revealed that demand for digitally skilled workers in UK vertical industries including technology, finance, e-commerce and retail, is outgrowing the level of digital skills available. 

Yet, only half (51%) of British companies within these vertical industries are willing to spend more than £25,000 on recruitment and learning and development (L&D) combined, to boost skills such as cybersecurity, software architecture and data analysis.

Recruitment and L&D spend not aligned with skills most lacking

The new research, conducted by Censuswide in September 2022, surveyed 300 HR decision-makers within the technology, finance, e-commerce and retail industries (100 per industry) to identify the digital skills most in demand and potential barriers to upskilling staff.  

More than a quarter (27%) of the HR decision-makers surveyed say their organisation faces the biggest lack of skilled workers in cybersecurity, followed by software architecture (15%) and data analysis (14%). Despite this, only a third (33%) are willing to spend more than £10,000 on recruitment and L&D to hire cybersecurity talent. Meanwhile, the majority of organisations plan to spend no more than £10,000 on recruitment and L&D for data analysis (71%) and software architecture (68%) skills.

Instead, almost a third of organisations plan to spend up to or more than £20,000 on recruitment for AI and ML (32%) and cloud (31%). Additionally, more than a quarter of organisations will spend up to or more than £20,000 on AI and ML (29%) and cloud (28%) L&D to upskill employees. Organisations will spend the most on L&D for GenZ (average £13,962), followed by £13,608 for Millennials and £13,495 for GenX over the next 12 months.

Disparity in recruitment vs L&D spend 

Encouragingly, the majority (83%) of vertical industries plan to spend between £25,000–£50,000 on overall recruitment for skilled tech vacancies over the next 12 months. Yet only 78% will spend the same amount on tech-related L&D.  

The technology sector is planning to spend the most on overall recruitment (average of £33,676), compared to £31,651 on L&D. Additionally, the finance sector will spend an average of £33,075 on recruitment compared to £31,400 on L&D, while the retail and e-commerce sector will spend an average of £29,275 on recruitment versus £28,801 on L&D.

The biggest barrier to upskilling current employees for more than two-fifths (21%) of organisations is insufficient resources, followed by a lack of internal personnel (19%) and a lack of internal buy-in (17%). In the tech sector specifically, 21% of organisations say lack of leadership support is a key barrier to upskilling current employees. However, across all industries combined, 58% of HR decision-makers feel ‘significantly’ supported by leadership when it comes to investment in tech-related L&D. 

“It’s encouraging that 80% of companies within the UK’s tech, finance and retail sectors have increased investment for tech-related learning and development over the past three years. However, our data suggests that further investment is needed to recession-proof the UK’s vertical industries,” said Alexia Pedersen, VP of EMEA at O’Reilly.

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