www.bbc.com Open in urlscan Pro
151.101.0.81  Public Scan

Submitted URL: https://lnkd.in/ehVEBqga
Effective URL: https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20220923-why-digital-literacy-is-now-a-workplace-non-negotiable
Submission: On October 05 via manual from US — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

WE'VE UPDATED OUR PRIVACY AND COOKIES POLICY

We've made some important changes to our Privacy and Cookies Policy and we want
you to know what this means for you and your data.

 * OK
 * Find out what's changed


LET US KNOW YOU AGREE TO COOKIES LET US KNOW YOU AGREE TO COOKIES

We use cookies to give you the best online experience.

We use cookies to give you the best online experience.

Please let us know if you agree to all of these cookies.

Please let us know if you agree to all of these cookies.

 * Yes, I agree Yes, I agree
 * No, take me to settings No, take me to settings







Homepage


ACCESSIBILITY LINKS

 * Skip to content
 * Accessibility Help

Sign in
Notifications
 * Home
 * News
 * Sport
 * Weather
 * iPlayer
 * Sounds
 * Bitesize
 * CBeebies
 * CBBC
 * Food

 * Home
 * News
 * Sport
 * Reel
 * Worklife
 * Travel
 * Future
 * Culture
 * TV
 * Weather
 * Sounds

More menu
Search BBC Search BBC

 * Home
 * News
 * Sport
 * Weather
 * iPlayer
 * Sounds
 * Bitesize
 * CBeebies
 * CBBC
 * Food

 * Home
 * News
 * Sport
 * Reel
 * Worklife
 * Travel
 * Future
 * Culture
 * TV
 * Weather
 * Sounds

Close menu

What is Worklife?

How We Work

How We Live

How We Think

More


Loading
The Toolbox | How we work
Why ‘digital literacy’ is now a workplace non-negotiable
Share using Email


Share on Twitter

Share on FacebookShare on Linkedin


(Image credit: Getty)

By Alex Christian27th September 2022

Digital skills once meant having a basic grasp of computers. Now, it means being
able to work adaptably and strategically across tools, devices and platforms.
D

Digital literacy used to mean being able to send an email or type using a
word-processing programme. It was a skill largely required of knowledge workers
– people who might use specific software at work, and need to be fluent in how
to use it accordingly. 

But the phrase has evolved significantly. Now, digital literacy means having the
skills to thrive in a society where communication and access to information are
increasingly done via digital technologies, such as online platforms and mobile
devices. The concept encompasses a broad understanding of an array of digital
tools that enable in-office, hybrid and remote work across all types of
workplaces: think real-time collaborative software, live workplace chat apps and
sophisticated asynchronous work tools. 

Today, digital literacy is no longer a functional proposition, it’s a mindset.
In the modern workplace, there is a greater expectation for employees to nimbly
adopt whatever technology comes with their job as well as adapt to ever-changing
tools and approaches. Workers are also expected to use technology strategically:
from working off their personal mobile devices, to leveraging collaborative
workflow programmes. 

And, importantly, digital skills are no longer essential only in knowledge work.
“These are becoming universally applicable to almost everyone,” says Ying Zhou,
director of the Future of Work Research Centre at the University of Surrey,
UK. By 2019, a UK government report showed digital skills were required in at
least 82% of online advertised vacancies.  

Zhou says workers who stand still and stop acquiring digital expertise risk
falling behind. “Every time technology is developed it pushes up the workforce’s
skill requirements. It becomes a race between digital skills and technology: the
faster it advances, the quicker we have to update our skills. The bar is being
raised all the time.” 

Why everyone needs digital literacy 

“Digital literacy is a broad concept: you can work with digital devices from
simple ways to high complex tasks,” continues Zhou. “It can vary from printing
out an invoice in a shop, to using word processors and spreadsheets, to advanced
use like web design, data analysis, computer programming and coding.” 

Job market demand for digital literacy has grown consistently since the 1980s.
Zhou cites research showing that while demand for literacy and numeracy skills
among the UK workforce has plateaued, roles requiring digital skills have
continued to rise. 

Over time, a degree of digital expertise has become expected even in roles
unrelated to tech. From warehouse operators using cloud-based management
systems, to doctors consulting with patients via remote video appointments, and
contractors managing construction projects through mobile collaboration apps,
technology is no longer sector-specific. 

“Digital literacy – and employers’ demand for digital skills – has evolved as
the economy and labour market has become more digitised,” says Danny Stacy, UK
head of talent intelligence at hiring platform Indeed, based in London. “What
used to be seen as a bonus is now a critical component of virtually every role.”



Today, digital literacy is a requirement of almost every role, as technology
reshapes processes and sectors (Credit: Getty)

This demand for digital literacy has spiked as employers adopt hybrid or
remote-working patterns. “Today, employers are far more likely to identify
specific digital skills and name software they use,” says Stacy. “There are
greater requirements to have proficiency in office and project management tools,
specific software so employees work more effectively.” 

Yet the growing importance of digital literacy doesn’t mean workers have to
master all the software out there to get a job. Instead, they have to be
digitally confident: keen to try new technologies; embrace how the right tools
can streamline routine tasks and improve workplace collaboration; while also
having the flexibility and adaptability to learn new processes. 

Today, employees need to assume they’ll keep upgrading digital skills. After
all, the expectation when a worker begins a new role is either they have the
digital skills to do the job or they’ll learn them – fast. “Hybrid and remote
working were only relevant to 5% of the workforce before the pandemic,” says
Zhou. “It’s nearly half of all workers now. Regardless of what work you did
previously, an employer now expects you to learn whatever digital skills are
required in a role.”  

Getting ahead 

One bit of positive news is that even if workers don't know the term, they’re
probably already fairly digitally literate. Technology’s ubiquity means nearly
everyone emails, messages, swipes, snaps and scrolls anyway, which often
translates into workplace technological skills.


> IT BECOMES A RACE BETWEEN DIGITAL SKILLS AND TECHNOLOGY: THE FASTER IT
> ADVANCES, THE QUICKER WE HAVE TO UPDATE OUR SKILLS - YING ZHOU

And even if workers feel like they're not quite where they want or need to be,
there are ways to improve these important skills. In cases where workers need to
be brought up to speed, companies often offer employees training to help bridge
any digital skills gap they may have. “In the face of worker shortages,
employers are showing greater willingness than before to train and upskill
candidates rather than seek the finished product,” says Stacy. 

This upskilling could take the form of on-the-job training or online learning
and development courses. However, Zhou says one of the best ways for employees
to build their digital literacy is by simply doing their job through a
trial-and-error process. “Informal learning and knowledge sharing among
colleagues is one of the most proven ways of acquiring new skills.”  

What people do outside the workplace can also help them, too. For employees
behind on their digital literacy, using technology at home offers opportunities
for experimentation and learning. For example, catching up with a friend via
video call, rather than text message, may help familiarise an employee with the
apps they’ll use at work; using social media can help them acclimatise to the
more informal forms of communication they may encounter through workplace
collaboration tools. 

Zhou says although most employees in the labour market may not currently need
highly complex computer skills, digital literacy is a baseline requirement that
is always rising. This means workers who keep up their technological expertise
continue to evolve in an ever-shifting labour market that increasingly values
digital skills.  

“Digital skills ultimately offer greater bargaining power in the job market,”
says Zhou. “The work environment has changed in favour of having greater digital
literacy.”

Share using Email


Share on Twitter

Share on FacebookShare on Linkedin

Share


RECOMMENDED ARTICLES

 * The Toolbox: The number one soft skill to hone
 * The Toolbox: The top skills employers want
 * worklife: The end of the layoff taboo

Around the BBC

Future
The countries facing mass myopia


Culture
Why 5 October, 1962 changed Britain


travel
The genius barns that fed the Alps




EXPLORE THE BBC

 * Home
 * News
 * Sport
 * Weather
 * iPlayer
 * Sounds
 * Bitesize
 * CBeebies
 * CBBC
 * Food

 * Home
 * News
 * Sport
 * Reel
 * Worklife
 * Travel
 * Future
 * Culture
 * TV
 * Weather
 * Sounds

 * Terms of Use
 * About the BBC
 * Privacy Policy
 * Cookies
 * Accessibility Help
 * Parental Guidance
 * Contact the BBC
 * BBC emails for you
 * Advertise with us
 * AdChoices / Do Not Sell My Info

Copyright © 2022 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external
sites. Read about our approach to external linking.