case study - business/skills balance research project
The research project was commissioned by an industry body to meet a brief set
by government agencies. The overall aim was to explore the links between skills
demand, skills development, business development and company performance and
productivity. There was also a pressing need to build understanding of how
SME needs for skills and knowledge compare to larger organisations.
The research methodology included in-depth analysis of the balance between
business strategy and skills strategy in high-performing technological companies
drawn from a spread of sectors.
A key consideration in our choice of methodology was the need to offer
employers something positive, useful, and potentially transformational, in
return for their involvement. We used two tried and tested tools
(StrategyTrak and
TrakFX) to support the research and to explore the links
between organisational market/product strategies, business performance measures,
and demand for skills.
The approach proved effective in gathering data across the breadth of
business strategy and in sufficient depth to draw key conclusions. The tools and
techniques used in the study were well received by employers.
The key conclusion drawn from the research is that innovative,
futures-focused organisations (IFFOs) link business performance to knowledge and
organisational learning, not ‘skills’ and HR processes.
This has important
implications for ‘skills/training’ support agencies, as processes that appeal to
larger companies may have little value to nimbler firms. The messages used to
engage employers must be carefully segmented and targeted if they are to meet
different requirements or expectations. There also seems to be market
failure in supporting knowledge and organisational learning initiatives among
futures-focused SMEs.
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