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A Case For Soft Skills in IT

Developing Balanced IT Professionals. A Case For Soft Skills in IT. Presenter: James E. Taylor, PhD BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina. James E. Taylor, PhD. Personal & Professional Introduction. SC Native: Live in Chapin, SC (Columbia area)

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A Case For Soft Skills in IT

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  1. Developing Balanced IT Professionals A Case For Soft Skills in IT Presenter: James E. Taylor, PhD BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina

  2. James E. Taylor, PhD Personal & Professional Introduction • SC Native: Live in Chapin, SC (Columbia area) • Retired Air Force 1985 -2005 (Avionics/Instructor) • BS in Workforce Education & Development • MA in Management and Leadership • PhD in Organization Management (Spec: Leadership) • Senior Professional in Human Resources (SPHR) • Lifelong Clemson Football Fan • Program Manager Entry-Level & Development Programs • Training Analysis • CompTia Future IT Skills Committee • Volunteer for IT-oLogy (SC IT Summit) • SNHU MBA Professor: Consulting; Non-Profit Management & Leadership; Change Management 3

  3. Session Agenda • Conventional Wisdom Regarding IT/Tech Talent • Required Knowledge for Success in IT/Tech • Skills Assessment Findings • Other Supporting Research • IQ vs. EQ • Approach Considerations • Potential Development Opportunities

  4. What are the top skills that make an employee successful within your organization? At your table take a moment to write down top 3 skills required for success within your organization. Top Skills for Success 1. 2. 3.

  5. Conventional Wisdom: Regarding Information Technology Talent 6

  6. Conventional Wisdom - Importance of STEM • To achieve success, regardless of Career Path we all need some level of focus and/or mastery in: • Science • Technology • Engineering • Math • Information Technology – (Learning Code, Security, Networking) Because that’s where the jobs are…ALL TRUE! A GROSS OVER SIMPLIFICATION! 7

  7. Conventional Wisdom – Business Integration • Information Technology has becomes more integrated with business • The day when IT Professional could sit behind a computer in an isolated office with no need (or desire) to interact with others is GONE! • Because that’s what technology jobs require…ALSO TRUE! • A GROSS Misunderstanding!

  8. The BIG QUESTION… • What do we need our IT Professionals to know to be successful in their Careers?

  9. Knowledge and Skills for Success in IT Broad Knowledge & Skills in Other Technical Areas KNOWLEDGE SPECIFIC IT Skills “I” IT Skills “T” Broad Foundation of Social, Emotional & Business Skills 10

  10. So, What Are These Broad Foundational Skills? Soft Skills?

  11. Who Started Calling It “SOFT” Skills? • Dale Carnegie’s self-help book “How to Win Friends and Influence People” • (30 million copies sold since 1936) • Addresses many of these skills • But, Carnegie stopped short of calling these skills “soft” • Perhaps the “softly-softly approach” - Aold management term for a choice to influence, rather than confront, and to make suggestions, rather than issuing orders

  12. Why Do We Call It SOFT? • It’s possible “soft skills” simply came about as an antonym to “hard skills” • Misleading due to the connotations of “soft,” like… easy, pliable, or readily yielding to pressure • We have hard data, hard evidence, and hard thinking • If hard implies objective, clearly defined and reliable • “Soft” must imply subjective, fuzzy, and unreliable • Which undermines the need for serious attention and development! • Regardless of the source, many IT organizations are late to the party and currently playing catch-up.

  13. Skills Assessment Findings: Organizational Research on IT Skill Needs 14

  14. Security Area Assessment Driving Factors • Like many of you, my organization’s security posture had formalized, changed, and evolved at an ever-increasing pace • Sr. Management were uncertain that they had the right mix of skills and staffing to address organizational needs in Cyber-Security and Information Security Compliance areas • There was also a need to reflect Security’s increased responsibility as an enterprise-wide entity

  15. Assessment Background

  16. Skills Assessment Approach

  17. Skills Assessment Expectations • Expectations were: • Need to Technically Upskill Existing Staff in Both Security Areas • Significant Hiring to Fill Technical Expertise Gaps • However, the results of the overall assessment were surprising!

  18. Skills Assessment Findings - Top 12 Skill Needs Cyber Security and Security Compliance Areas 19

  19. Google’sProject Oxygen &Project Aristotle Supporting Research: IT Skill Needs

  20. Google’sProject Oxygen: Individules Non-Tech Individual Characteristics Rank Highest • Crunched Employee Data 1998 – 2013 • Top Characteristics of Successful Google Employees • Good Coaching • Communicating • Listening • Insight Into Others • Empathy • Supportiveness • Critical Thinking • Problem-solving • Making Complex Connections Result: Google Expanded Training and Hiring Practices To Include These Characteristics

  21. Google’sProject Aristotle: Teams • Analyzed Similar Data from Most Inventive and Productive Teams to Identify Best Team Characteristics • Highest Ranked Team Characteristics (Non-Technical) • Equality (Empowerment) • Generosity (Shared Credit) • Curiosity toward Others Ideas (Active Listening & Understanding) • Empathy • Emotional Intelligence • Too Succeed Every Team Member: • Must Feel Confident Speaking-up • Comfortable Making Mistakes

  22. 2019 DevOps Institute Report on Upskilling • Recruiting for DevOps is on the rise • Top must-have skills for DevOps professionals (Surveyed 1,600 individuals) • Automation, Process and Soft Skills were the top 3 “must-have” skills • Process skills are essential for intelligent automation • Soft skills and technical skills were equally important • Business skills were most important to leaders Respondents' top “Must Have” skills were Automation (57%), Process Skills (55%) and Soft Skills (53%).

  23. Which Is More Important? • A 2016 Study of 73 U.S. and international employers suggest that “soft skills are significantly more important than hard skills for entry-level IT positions” • The most important Soft Skills were: • Willingness to Learn - Critical Thinking - Attitude • The most important Hard Skills were: • Microsoft Knowledge / Database / Data / SQL / Security • Interestingly, industry, organization size, or location did not affect importance K. Jones, L. Leonard & G. Lang (2016) Desired Skills for Entry Level IS Positions: Identification and Assessment

  24. Emotional Intelligence SUBTITLE GOES HERE IQ EQ

  25. IQ & EQ - What’s the Difference IQ – Intelligence Quotient EQ – Emotional Quotient (Aka: smarts or basic intelligence) Ability to learn, understand and apply information to skills, logical reasoning, word comprehension, math skills, abstract and spatial thinking, filter irrelevant information. In the workplace translates to: Success with challenging tasks, ability to analyze think and connect the dots, research and development. Understanding technology. (Aka: emotional intelligence) Ability to identify, evaluate, control and express ones own emotions; perceive, and assess others' emotions; use emotions to facilitate thinking, understand emotional and situational meanings. In the workplace translates to: Teamwork, leadership, successful relations, service orientation, initiative, collaboration. Daniel Goleman's 1995 book: Emotional Intelligence - Why It Can Matter More Than IQ

  26. EQ – Emotional Quotient & Performance • Studies have shown: • 90% of high performers have high levels of emotional intelligence • Only 20% of low performers have high emotional intelligence • So, chances are slim that you will find a high performer with low emotional intelligence • Actively working on emotional intelligence directly correlates to success on the job • Bradberry & Greaves claim in their book, The Emotional Intelligence Quick Book (2003) that “they haven’t yet to identify a job that high performance isn't tied to Emotional Intelligence”

  27. EQ – Emotional Quotient • The four areas of Emotional Intelligence (EQ) that form the basis of our behavior are: • Self Awareness • Self Management • Social Awareness • Relationship Management (Goleman, 1995) • EQ encompass the traits most often defining an individual’s “soft skills” • Identifying and managing “soft skills” (EQ) correlates with increases in employee productivity and organizational success. (Benjamin, Gulliya, & Crispo, 2012)

  28. EQ – Emotional Quotient and Teams • The four areas of Emotional Intelligence (EQ) within work teams: • Emotional Awareness • Accurate perception (awareness) of team emotions “or mood” • Emotional Management • Using awareness and actions to move team behavior toward the positive • Internal Relationship Management • Effective interaction with one another …“Team Work Harmony” • External Relationship Management • Ability to act effectively across organizational boundaries

  29. Working Toward Emotionally Intelligent Teams Starts with the Individuals Unspoken conflict is in direct opposition to positive team EQ Individuals • Identify individuals’ Strengths and Weaknesses • Avoid Labels and groups…address actions and people at Face Value • Determine Specific Actions for individuals Teams Identify Team Strengths and Team Weaknesses Recognize Accomplishments and hard work at team level Allow team members to have a Voice Address unspoken conflict

  30. Unspoken Conflict: Worst Case Scenario January 28, 1986 • Predicted launch temperature 31 Degrees • O-ring safety warning at temps below 53 Degrees • Pressure to launch – NASA Culture of “Pressing on” • Conference call with Key players to discuss • Engineers told leaders that there was a major safety concern with the O-rings • Leadership deliberated….Made Decision to Launch • Informed the Key Players, including the same Engineers that • Engineers were conflicted, but did not speak up or challenge decision a second time

  31. How Do We as IT Organizations Approach Needs? 32

  32. Organizational Assumptions…Realization • We are talking about its: Basic assumptions an organization makes is one of its deepest levels of strategic orientation, whether manifest or latent. If an organizations assumptions are out of line with reality, it may eventually face a survival problem. When examining strategy, we must validated before deciding on goals and means. • Paraphrased from Edgar H. Schein’s Organizational Culture and Leadership

  33. The Issues • The Rub is… many experts report that we are in a “soft skills gap” and “manycolleges are not developing skills needed to become value-added employees” • Entry-Level IT Workers: • Are More accustomed to texting than talking • Prefer virtual vs face-to-face communication • Have a Twitter mentality…communicate in short bursts of information • To find the “Hard Skills” organizations are at times forced to hire those who fall short on interpersonal abilities

  34. Acquire or Develop Conundrum This challenge is not an easy one: Efficiency innovation

  35. Ways to Develop These Required Skills Addressing the identified Skills Gap

  36. Assessment Outcomes and Actions… • Also Developed: • Business Knowledge Boot Camp • Area Specific Training Plans • Individual Development Plans • Certification Plans for each position • Communication Workshops • Structure Adjustments • Cyber • Compliance • Information Security

  37. Regardless of your approach… • Understand that “soft” skills, not merely hard-skills, credentials and technical know-how ultimately determine true employability and success • “Soft” skills help employees work more effectively, build solid professional relationships, and navigate challenges that arise on the job • Decide what skills really matter to the Position, Team, Organization • Focus On and Develop Those! • And, Lastly…

  38. Social skills Personal skills Job-related skills Affirmative skills Interpersonal skills People specific skills Career attributes Character traits Ability to deal with people Personal qualities Personal characteristic Positive personal attributes People skills Savoir être (Know-How) Positive Life skills Effective Team skills Positive personal coordination Positive attitudinal approach Social competence Personal behavior Call Them Anything But “Soft” Skills!! • Social intelligence • Personal behavior • Social super powers • Common sense • Emotional intelligence • Overall competencies • Personal competencies • General competence • Social graces • Organizational abilities • Cognitive empathy • Emotional empathy • Works well with others • Social astuteness • Positive flexible attitude • Productive personality traits • Positive manners • Personal work qualifications • Positive personal habits • Personal ability traits

  39. ? Question Time ?

  40. 3:30 PM - Applying Competency Mapping and Assessments to Build a Cyber Workforce Baseline  • 4:30 PM - CompTIA Partner Summit Networking  UP NEXT

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