One of the advantages of having a party conference in close
vicinity to your offices is that it can give you access to the holders of
political power. As you may have noted the current Government’s party held
their annual conference in Manchester and as such I was invited (along with
other local business leaders) to meet with a government minister.
During our
discussions there were two key themes which came out. The first being 'getting
access to government spending' (and getting subsequent payment) via a complex
series of supply chains and secondly having the 'available skills' to be able to
drive growth. The former topic I will leave for another day.
The general consensus from representatives across a wide range of industries
(including transport and construction) was that there was a shortage of skilled
resource and that there was a mismatch between the output of the education
system and the needs of industry.
I must admit this surprised me. I can
appreciate that there could be a shortage of skills in our industry; where we
need a set of specialist capabilities which combine the engineering and IT
disciplines, but did not appreciate there may be a shortage in other areas.
At a macro level, I would challenge whether this skills
shortage is going to be a barrier to the expected economic recovery. Certainly
in our industry we are seeing projects which are being delayed due to lack of trained
resource to deliver - this is in contrast to the common view that cash is the
constraining factor.
Written by Phil Gillard General Manager, SolutionsPT |
What can be done about this? I will leave comment on the
macro situation to others, however in our industry I believe that we must work
towards greater automation.
By this I mean automating the work being done by
the people responsible for delivering and ensuring the availability of
Industrial IT systems.
If we can succeed in automating some of the more mundane
tasks, I believe we can not only create extra capacity - but also help retain
people in our industry by making life more interesting.
In part 2 - next week, I will
explain how I think this could be done.
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