CIPD - Too many employers still using generic degree qualifications to screen candidates, reducing employment opportunities and contributing to ongoing skills gaps

3 Aug 2022 12:43 PM

CIPD calls on employers to think strategically about their workforce requirements in new report

New CIPD research highlights that the majority of employers (57%) still mainly look for degrees or post-graduate qualifications when recruiting staff. While a degree is a requirement for certain occupations and roles, the CIPD is warning that too often employers base hiring decisions on whether someone has a degree or not, regardless of its relevance. By doing this, the CIPD says employers could be missing out on key talent, exacerbating skills gaps and reducing employment opportunities for people.

It is calling for employers to ensure that employers are thinking carefully about whether a degree is required for roles when hiring, and to invest in a range of vocational training options to upskill existing staff. The call comes at a time when the UK is facing a tight labour market and firms are struggling to find the skills they need in job candidates and in their own workforces. 

The CIPD, the professional body for HR and people development, surveyed more than 2,000 senior-decision makers on skills, and found that:

Lizzie Crowley, skills adviser for the CIPD, said: “Employers need to stop thinking that generic university degrees are always the best indicator of a person’s potential at work. They think they’re getting ‘off the shelf’ capability rather than assessing the specific skills needed for roles, then wondering why they have ongoing skills gaps.

“More employers need to take a strategic approach to skills to understand current and future needs. This means valuing a wider range of experience and qualifications when recruiting for roles and understanding all of the training and development options available to employers to upskill existing staff.”

The CIPD’s research also suggests that many employers are in the dark on training opportunities available to them via higher education (HE) or further education (FE) institutions. Just a fifth (19%) currently access external training from FE colleges, and one in four (25%) use universities or other HE institutions. Among those who didn’t source training from these, three in ten (29%) said they didn’t know why they weren’t accessing training from these providers.

The CIPD is warning that this disconnect presents a significant obstacle to the Government’s vision of a revitalised college sector with employers at its heart, and its broader goal of a ‘high-skill, high-wage’ economy.

Crowley continues:

“Too few employers engage with FE institutions and employer awareness of the Government‘s technical education reforms and new vocational training routes remains low. If the Government‘s reforms are to be successful there is an urgent need to raise awareness and share examples of the positive impact that further education institutions can play in developing workforce skills.“

Employer views on skills policy in the UK