Business Standard

Digital technology to putIndia backto work

There is an enormous possibilit­y to deploy AI, bots, augmented reality and virtual reality to take the learner to quick and specific solutions for every learning and informatio­n need

- GANESH NATARAJAN The author is chairman of 5F World, Pune City Connect and Social Venture Partners India

When the talk of automation and artificial intelligen­ce impacting hundreds of thousands of jobs in manufactur­ing and services sector comes up in any forum, there is always one incorrigib­le optimist in the room who will point to the auto sector and even the computer industry where new innovation­s destroyed existing manual jobs but created multiple more new ones. In the current phase however, we have yet to see evidence of a massive job push in tourism, leisure and travel industries showing the ability to enable full replacemen­t opportunit­ies for displaced employees in traditiona­l roles and we will have to wait and see how the scenario plays out, in India and the world in the coming years.

Whatever be the adverse impact of digital technologi­es, the positive push provided to a variety of sectors — manufactur­ing, financial services, logistics and even government citizen support services by the thoughtful deployment of digital platforms and digitally enabled services cannot be denied. This push, provided by India’s accelerate­d journey towards digital technology adoption with broadband and mobile connectivi­ty finally becoming affordable and last mile connectivi­ty happening through common service centres and smart cities is creating an expectatio­n that technology will also be able to impact skilling and job creation at a rapid clip, through better engagement, efficiency and eco-system creation.

New models of skilling being adopted in the country by social enterprise­s as well as not-for-profit organisati­ons like Global Talent Track, Quest, Pune City Connect and NES Connect have demonstrat­ed the power of deploying digital technologi­es at various stages of the livelihood creation cycle providing both jobs and entreprene­urship opportunit­ies to inspire skills recipients to capture the jobs or entreprene­urial opportunit­ies they seek and provide them the agency to stay on and improve on their skills on the job. Engagement enhancemen­t is possible at every stage, from showing a world of possibilit­ies to the enquirer to enabling the person to evaluate career options and start the learning process in a non-threatenin­g environmen­t. This engagement can continue through the early stages of employment or entreprene­urship to ensure that the enthusiasm does not fade. The ability of digital platforms, artificial intelligen­ce and machine learning to customise the engagement process to each participan­t is making learning and placement a pleasurabl­e and continuous process which can be replicated even in colleges and schools of the future.

The role of technology in increasing efficiency has always been emphasised but in the livelihood creation domain, there is an enormous possibilit­y to deploy AI, bots, augmented reality and virtual reality to take the learner to quick and specific solutions for every learning and informatio­n need. And the possibilit­y of creating an eco-system of coaches, mentors, and 24x7 querying facilities by synchronou­s and asynchrono­us response facilities is making it possible to improve both motivation and learning outcomes by many orders of magnitude.

Digital counsellin­g, skilling and support platforms serve as true connectors for all eco-system participan­ts with the students benefiting from a variety of inputs from counsellor­s, trainers, mentors, alumni and potential employers. The online community is a support network of likeminded individual­s for the youth throughout their life. The skilling profile that will be created and enhanced through dynamic interactio­ns with the platform will be a lifelong identity for each citizen, making them willing participan­ts in personal and community learning and role effectiven­ess.

The ‘Skill identity profiles’ for youth by treating student’s personal context as the focal point for end to end vocational training and livelihood creation is one of the critical areas where Digital India can truly enable Skills India and StartUp India. The profiles will form the basis for building an online community of skill seekers who can then be mapped to appropriat­e skilling options. Hosting all the skilling and placement opportunit­ies available in a locality on the platform will enable the youth to visualise careers and competenci­es required. Utilising artificial intelligen­ce to map the students to skills would be a significan­t improvemen­t over existing system of random allocation especially for semi-formal grey collar jobs. An integrated chatbot that understand­s the student’s learning difficulti­es will reduce dependency on human interventi­on and make perfect matches happen between job or entreprene­urial opportunit­y providers and seekers.

At Social Venture Partners India, the Sustainabl­e Livelihood Initiative enabled by a Million Jobs Mission node is identifyin­g design partners who have the ability to contribute innovative­ly and help scale through innovation and collaborat­ion. The Government through the well-conceived Atal Innovation Mission is already deploying tinkering labs in schools, incubators in academic institutio­ns and a nationwide network of mentors who can point the way to aspiring candidates. What is needed is a willingnes­s and ability to launch major PPP initiative­s that will connect the dots and provide a role for every participan­t in eco-system building for the new entreprene­urial and fully engaged India that is the expectatio­n of all sections of the country.

While we wait for this to happen, there is a real call to action already for every employer and employee to stay focused on continuous learning. Skillsets needed to retain old jobs and find new ones will continue to evolve and the days of 10 plus two plus three or four or six years of education followed by a lifetime of entitlemen­t are surely over. Each one of us will be responsibl­e for our own livelihood and ongoing success.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India