City
Epaper

Leadership, communication skills twice more in demand than AI/ML: Report

By IANS | Updated: September 25, 2024 13:25 IST

New Delhi, Sep 25 Demand for human skills such as leadership, communication and emotional intelligence is twice more ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 25 Demand for human skills such as leadership, communication and emotional intelligence is twice more in demand than the knowledge of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML), finds a report on Wednesday.

The report by workforce agility solutions maker Cornerstone OnDemand, provides a comprehensive overview of skills demand on the rise, an analysis from the past five years and indicators for future trends and demand forecasting.

The report highlights that AI, ML job postings are on the rise -- increasing by 65 per cent since 2019, and GenAI-related job postings have seen a 411 per cent surge.

Yet, the demand for human skills, or soft skills, such as leadership, communication, and emotional intelligence was found to outpace the need for digital skills globally. Human skills were found two times more in demand than digital skills, revealed the report.

Communication, interpersonal collaboration and problem-solving were the top human skills-related job postings, the report said.

“Keeping a close watch on changing skills and workplace trends in real-time across the market is essential for forecasting and staying competitive,” said Mike Bollinger, Global VP, Strategic Initiatives at Cornerstone.

“This report not only reveals the workforce readiness gap, that skills are evolving faster than organisations and individuals can keep pace with, limiting innovation and adaptability, but also emphasizes the importance of retaining critical human or ’soft’ skills within your organisation,” he added.

The report showed that job postings in Augmented Reality (AR)/ Virtual Reality (VR) soared by 154 per cent in the past 5 years.

Further, India was found to lead with 4.1 per cent of its job postings focused on AI/ML, reflecting its growing role in the global AI landscape. Germany and Japan follow with 2.5 per cent and 2.2 per cent respectively.

While GenAI skills are concentrated in industries like software development and IT consulting, there is a rising demand in financial services, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, and banking.

The demand for remote and flexible work has seen a 39 per cent increase. Australia has the highest number of job postings looking for remote or flexible workers (22.8 per cent), followed by Germany (21 per cent), New Zealand (20.3 per cent), the UK (18.8 per cent), the US(15 per cent), Spain (11.6 per cent), Japan (9.7 per cent) and India (6.3 per cent). France (4.9 per cent) and Italy (1.4 per cent) ranked among the lowest.

The report covered data from more than 200 countries and territories, including job postings, resumes, government data, and other data points in 11 languages.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

CricketSooryavanshi, Jurel help RR win by 6 wickets, hand RCB their first loss of IPL 2026

CricketIPL 2026 Standings: Updated Points Table After Rajasthan Royals vs Royal Challengers Bengaluru​​​​​​​ Match

Other SportsIPL 2026: The way Vaibhav batted made all the difference, says RCB captain Patidar

Other SportsIPL 2026: Sooryavanshi the hero again as RR thrash RCB by six wickets

NationalAI Summit protest case: Court grants interim protection to IYC member, directs him to join investigation

Business Realted Stories

BusinessTripura emerges fastest-growing economies in NE, attracts Rs 2,000 cr investment interest at Bengaluru conclave

Business4.05 lakh PNG connections gasified, not LPG: Petroleum Ministry

BusinessUltra Gas to invest Rs. 900 crores to expand LNG Infra amid West Asia crisis: MD, Maqsood Sheikh

BusinessNITI Aayog releases reports on Ease of Doing R&D​

BusinessTimely intervention cleared 90 pc cargo backlog amid Strait of Hormuz disruptions: Minister