Gulf News

Digital transforma­tion may end up creating more jobs

Soft skills and willingnes­s to change key to future worklife, experts say

- BY ANDREW STAPLES Chief Business Reporter

Digital and tech transforma­tion is one of the top priorities for firms in Dubai, Singapore, Mumbai and Sydney — and many of those firms expect to expand their workforce.

Data presented by Christophe­r Abraham, CEO and Head of the Dubai Campus of SP Jain School of Global Management (SPJ), at his school’s annual HR Conclave at the Taj Hotel, Dubai, are among the clearest indicators that the growing use of technology and automation may not spark the much-feared job losses, but could create jobs.

In Dubai, 44 per cent of HR executives the business school surveyed said their organisati­on planned to expand its workforce; the figures were higher in Singapore and Mumbai.

Abraham pointed out that while automation would take all the jobs it could, machines were very far from emulating core human attributes — a capacity for love, empathy, creativity and critical thinking. “These will become the critical skills of the 21st century,” he said.

“In our business we do predict much more jobs. We predict different ■ jobs,” said Henrik Chirstense­n, Head of HR at logistics firm Kuehne and Nagel, Dubai, said during a panel discussion on the future of digital enterprise­s.

Most panellists agreed, though on a second panel, Sanjay Bhattachar­ya, Managing Director of Homan Capital Advisory, Protiviti, Dubai, said recent research suggested digital transforma­tion and digitisati­on would see 3 to 5 per cent of exiting jobs vanishing, and the rest being completely transforme­d.

Changing job roles and business models was a major theme of the conclave, but as panel moderator Marko Selakovic, Senior Manager — Institutio­nal Developmen­t at SPJ, pointed out exactly what changes would come was very hard to predict.

“How many of you, 10 years ago in 2008, could predict the profession blockchain developer?” he asked attendees. “How many of you could predict the profession cryptocurr­ency specialist? How many of you 15 years ago could predict the profession social media analyst?”

Instead, the experts on the panels called on HR profession­als to work on changing employees’ mindsets, emphasisin­g soft skills, flexibilit­y and lifelong learning, and to find ways to get those resisting changes to buy into them.

 ?? Clint Egbert/Gulf News ?? From left: Hariprasad Pichai (Principal of Arthur D. Little, Dubai), Baljeet Nagi (Director — SCM, Oracle, Dubai), Henrik Christense­n (Head of HR, Kuehne + Nagel, Dubai) and Alex Malouf (Corporate Communicat­ions Manager, Procter & Gamble, Dubai at the...
Clint Egbert/Gulf News From left: Hariprasad Pichai (Principal of Arthur D. Little, Dubai), Baljeet Nagi (Director — SCM, Oracle, Dubai), Henrik Christense­n (Head of HR, Kuehne + Nagel, Dubai) and Alex Malouf (Corporate Communicat­ions Manager, Procter & Gamble, Dubai at the...
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates