Address skilling to beat the chief barrier to cloud adoption
COVID-19 has been the Digital Transformation Officer for global enterprises, pushing them into cloud adoption. The mindset of organizations evolved, rapidly, in the last 14 months, to put hyper-scalers into their technology supply chain. This rush to cloudify has resulted in:
According to Gartner, just public cloud end-user spending will grow 18.4% in 2021, to total $304.9 billion, up from $257.5 billion in 2020. NASSCOM data (from Zinnov) shows that demand for cloud skills will balloon, leading to a 39% increase in open positions. These figures indicate that CIOs don’t have a choice. They have to go ahead with cloud adoption with an eye on scalability, shorter deployment cycles, the ability to innovate, access to a rich application ecosystem, and push-button channel integration that will provide good market responsiveness.
But here is the truth: For every $100 they currently spend on on-premise, it will cost them just $30 for managed assets on the cloud. This spells major savings, allowing organizations to release large budgets for investments in innovation programs. But none of this will be possible if skilling remains a challenge. Creating the right talent is the solution.
To achieve skilling at scale, we urgently need a variety of initiatives. These can be private, public or based on private-public partnership (PPP) models. This is where programs like NASSCOM’s future skills prime’ fit in. It addresses the problem of skilling by aiming to upskill 400,000 people over 3 years across 10 emerging technologies and 10 professional skills. The program uses a public-private partnership model for business success and content that is AI-curated and hand-picked (by industry SMEs) for learning success.
However, the goal of the future skills initiative runs deeper than upskilling—it is aimed at creating competency standards (knowledge required to perform a job, key functions that need to be undertaken and the skills required to do this effectively) called National Occupational Standards (NOS). To support NOS, a common language is being created. This will provide a clear and shared understanding when jobs and roles are discussed across academia, industry and government.
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We need dozens of such skilling initiatives. Without them, organizations will be left stranded. They will not have the talent pipeline which can respond to the accelerated demand for cloud. For the moment, the priority of every organization with the ambition of riding the cloud wave should be to create the talent that will take them into the future.
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