Simple Steps To Identify Your Soft Skill Strengths
by Cammy Keith
When looking at a job description or advert do you focus only on the job-specific skills required to “get the job done”, the hard skills that demonstrate your competency and proficiency?
You’re missing a trick if you don’t look beyond those requirements.
Yes, of course, hard skills are essential, but if you want to work for an employer where team dynamics, leadership, good management, and productivity are valued or where employee engagement is baked into the culture then soft skills matter too.
Soft skills shape how you work and interact with other people and they often determine who is offered the job, particularly when these attributes differentiate you from a short-list of candidates who all have very similar levels of technical competency.
When I talk of technical competency, I’m not only referring to my Technical and Industrial area but across our TMM Recruitment specialisms. For instance, accountants have trained, quantifiable skills that are specific to their profession, as do marketers, lawyers, software developers, and contract managers. You get the idea.
Hard and soft skills are transferable skills, they’re not necessarily industry-specific, can be applied across different jobs, and empower people to shift between sectors, succeed in promoted posts, and build diverse, interesting careers.
Employers value transferable skills because you can immediately apply them, enabling you to “hit the ground running”, make a positive impact more quickly in your new job, and require less time to integrate with your new team. They indicate that you are adaptable and flexible – two sought-after soft skills right there.
Soft Skills Gaps
I think that innovation has accentuated the importance of soft skills. Employers understand that soft skills impact the commercial success of a business. If a business is struggling to leverage its technical expertise, its differentiators, or USPs, then there are likely to be many soft skills gaps.
The more innovative, technical, or complex the product or service, the greater the need for effective soft skills to overcome obstacles, solve problems, strengthen stakeholder relationships, and maximise potential.
For example, consider an engineering business that has developed a pioneering product. The product may be a customer magnet, but if customers find the company difficult to work with and don’t place another order then there’s been a breakdown that’s probably based on a soft skills gap.
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If this company can recruit people relatively easily because the exciting work is a candidate magnate, yet staff turnover is high and people leave after a relatively short tenure then there’s a soft skills gap.
Sought After Soft Skills
Every day we talk with clients about the soft skills they’re looking for, these are the ones that come up most regularly across our specialisms:
Identify Your Soft Skills
When I’m talking to candidates, my experience is that they can reel off their hard skills. Soft skill strengths are much harder for them to define because they are hard to measure, intangible, and often, natural personality traits that people don’t perceive as a skill.
Here’s a comprehensive list of soft skills, you’ll recognise them all, however, how do you identify the soft skills that are personal to you?
If you’re struggling to do this yourself, there are several other sources of guidance:
In my final article in this short soft skills series, I’ll share ideas for highlighting your soft skills on your CV and during interviews and how to develop your soft skills for career progression.