11 Common Skill Gaps For New Hires Out of College

Nearly 64,000 managers in a recent 2016 survey by Payscale & Future Workplace felt new hires out of college lacked skills for success in the workplace. It’s disheartening after sharing a small fortune with a university that you or someone you know could come out unprepared.  Take a look at some of the numbers described in this survey.  Out of 14,000 recent graduates, many were missing the following skills.

Critical Thinking/Problem Solving     60%
 Attention to Detail   56%
 Communication   46%
 Ownership     44%
 Leadership      44%
 Writing Proficiency   44% 
 Public Speaking  39%
 Data Analysis  36%
 Interpersonal Skills/Teamwork   36%
 Industry Specific Software     34%
Math       19%
Design   14%

Source.  “Leveling Up:  How to Win in the Skills Economy.”

How Much Is Talent Acquisition Watching You?

It’s a little creepy but as a professional you are being watched.  The phenomena called social media is a major tool used by employers to confirm your background and qualifications.  According to a survey by Harris Poll on behalf of Career Builders, 60% of employers use social networking sites to research job candidates. 

52 percent of the time the information gathered encourages the employer to make an offer.  Unfortunately, 48 percent of the time information accumulated helps the employer not make you a job offer.  The scale is tipped in your favor when background data confirms your job qualifications or when your personal website showcases a stellar professional image.

Mitigate Toxic Vibes in the Workplace

Toxic employees in the workplace bring negative behaviors that tax your sanity and your health.  They lurk or reside near your cubicle as supervisors, direct reports, coworkers, or even a vendor. Unfortunately, you can’t change people.  The best chance you have to keep your sanity and preserve your health is to create a strategy to mitigate the misery.  There are a few approaches you can leverage to reduce the drama of stressful situations.

Reframe Your Thinking

You can’t change people but you do have the power to change yourself.  Avoid dwelling on how the other person or people can change.  Ask yourself, “what can I do differently in this situation?”

Patience Is Golden

It takes 14 days to start a habit and just as long to end one.  All situations are not resolved quickly.  Be patient on getting resolution and understand that problems surface when there may be more to it at the root. 

It’s Not Always about You

The problem is not always related to you.  Your colleague may have just yelled at you but it could just be an after effect of not getting enough sleep the night before. 

Harness Your Communication Skills

If you are in a work situation where toxic behavior is negatively impacting your success, take time to confront the situation in a positive manner.  Schedule time to discuss the matter with the individuals in question.  Preserve self-esteem throughout the conversation in word and tone.  Seek win-win solutions.  Make time to share and listen to each other.  Try not to place anyone on the defensive by pointing fingers.  Use the following formula to share your concern.  “When you <action>, it makes me feel <emotion> like <result of the action>.

Coordinate Your Style

Be sensitive to other people’s styles and how they like to work.  When you get to understanding their communication style, you can sometimes adjust your approach to get a more productive relationship. 

Document Negative Behaviors

Take time to carefully note what happens, when, and how it impacts the work you do.  Don’t make it personal.