Khaleej Times

Skills gap? Tech can solve it

- Alvin R. Cabral Vast reach — alvin@khaleejtim­es.com

dubai — As the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) sets in, there are certain concerns that need to be addressed. However, the solutions also lie in itself: using technology to alleviate these issues and contribute to society in a growth-oriented way.

One of these concerns is the skills gap — the gap between what employers want or need their employees to be able to do, and what those employees can actually do, as defined by Forbes.

Necip Ozyucel, cloud and enterprise group lead at Microsoft Gulf, told Khaleej Times at the recent Gitex Technology Week 2018 that it is difficult to quantify the skills gap: he cited the World Economic Forum’s ‘Future of Jobs’ report, which examined the impact of the 4IR on our children’s careers.

“One prediction from that report, which has almost become a meme, is that two in three children starting school this year will be working in profession­al roles that have yet to be created,” he points out.

To narrow this, there are certain steps that must be taken.

“The key here is to recognise what imminent future events might catalyse change,” he stressed.

For example, he says, an upsurge in demand for cloud services can prompt firms to building data centres — Microsoft has one each in Dubai and Abu Dhabi — which will create jobs not just for tech profession­als.

The World Bank says that for each technology job created, around 4.3 jobs are generated across occupation­s and income groups. And research conducted by the Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n shows that cloud computing and the Microsoft ecosystem set to create more than 520,000 jobs across the MEA between 2017 and 2022. If we take the World Bank figure — times 4.3 — in perspectiv­e, this could mean over two million jobs in the MEA in just over five years.

Education is also key to bring down this gap: using technology: “Reinventin­g the classroom… and other profession­al courses allow anyone, at any age, to skill, reskill and upskill as needed — in the cloud, AI and many other soughtafte­r areas,” Ozyucel says.

The revolution we are in today also provides opportunit­ies for companies to innovate further, which would in turn be beneficial to endusers — especially if binding these emerging technologi­es together.

“The 4IR is the accelerati­on in adoption of solutions that merge the digital and the physical,” Ozyucel says.

“Government and private enterprise­s have all benefitted from the ability to engage citizens and customers, empower public servants and employees, optimise operations, and reinvent products, services and business models.”

Retailers, he says, have the power to build 360-degree views of customers to give demanding millennial­s and Generation Z exactly the kind of individual and personalis­ed service they expect.

Financial services entities, meanwhile, can build intelligen­t, predictive models that advise on every aspect of investment and can suggest new products for changing markets, while manufactur­ers can monitor the entire production process, from raw materials to warehousin­g and logistics, tying factory equipment to the back office for real-time views of efficiency.

And government­s — Dubai and the UAE’s being a prime example — can streamline workflows, eliminate bureaucrac­y and build smarter, safer societies.

Ozyucel pointed to two emerging technologi­es that will primarily drive this transforma­tion.

“Artificial intelligen­ce is by far the most prominent of the transforma­tive technologi­es available to organisati­ons today,” he says, giving Rammas, the Dubai Electricit­y and Water Authority’s chatbot, as a very good example, dealing with customers both in English and Arabic.

The Internet of Things, meanwhile, “is playing a starring role in the digital transforma­tion of manufactur­ing companies in the region”.

“Sensors in installed products not only enable the cost-saving concept of preventati­ve maintenanc­e — but have given rise to the highly-profitable servitisat­ion business model, where companies can increase unit margins by bundling value-added services with each product sold.”

Reinventin­g the classroom… and other profession­al courses allow anyone, at any age, to skill, reskill and upskill as needed... in new tech

Necip Ozyucel, cloud and enterprise group lead at Microsoft Gulf

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates