Outdated Skills: How to Protect Yourself from Being Expendable
Amii Barnard-Bahn, JD, PCC
C-suite Coach | Partner, Kaplan & Walker | Board Member | HR, Compliance & Ethics Advisor | Contributor, Harvard Business Review | Ranked #1 Global Thought Leader in Careers & Legal | MG100 | Former CAO, CCO, CHRO
You’d probably agree with me that the future world of work requires everyone to become a lifelong learner. Author Jeffrey Wald recently estimated the rate at which our skills are monetizable is dropping.
Currently it’s estimated 4-6 years before a skill is outdated. That means that many things we know and tools we use to do our job well today will be obsolete and done in new ways (e.g. AI), and more effectively in the future. For those of us who are highly invested in our technical knowledge, we know how fast it ages.
While a sobering statistic, we can leverage the forced shifts in work to help ground us in seeing the future. We have already learned valuable lessons around what we need to be focused on to be fulfilled going forward.
In the future, our relationships will take on even greater significance. How we relate to each other and ourselves will be the value differentiator in our organizations and the world at large.
The key to this of course, is rooted in leadership and the skills leaders possess and continue to refine to set and drive a productive culture.
As a Fellow at the Harvard Institute of Coaching, I served as part of its research team exploring the impact of the pandemic on leadership (and interviewed several clients — you know who you are, thank you!).
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Our research resulted in the publication of “Leading With Humanity: The Future of Leadership and Coaching” (downloadable free here ). Reflecting on the positive behavior shifts as well as the accompanying pain and hardship for many, our earnest hope is that this is a call for us to lean in to our empathetic, agile and resilient nature. That our collective experience will bring us to organizational leadership that is sustainable, equitable, humane.
Now that many of you are back at the office fully or several days/week, or have hybrid work arrangements, or are remote with bunny slippers, take an honest appraisal of your leadership skills and the strength of your key relationships. Have the important conversations with those whose careers you impact, as well as those who have the power to impact your work.
Good leaders are hard to find, and bad leaders are easily replaced.
To your success,
Amii
PS To receive my annual holiday reflections video short, make sure you're a part of my private subscriber newsletter (completely different leadership content from this "In Confidence" LinkedIn newsletter). You can sign up here: bit.ly/amiibbnews
The Master Negotiator & Body Language Expert at The Master Negotiator
11 个月Amii Barnard-Bahn, JD, PCC, good article. And I like the aspect of good leaders being hard to find and bad ones easily replaced. It drives home the point as to why a leader should strive to become better while staying abreast of the changes that are bound to occur ... Greg
Great insights, Amii!
CEO, Leadership & Executive Coach at BigBlueGumball. TEDx speaker. Author of “VisuaLeadership.” MG 100 Coaches.
11 个月Great advice, Amii (and I, of course, especially loved the visual)! ??