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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source:https:\/\/techcrunch.com\/2023\/06\/15\/an-investor-an-operator-and-their-plan-to-upskill-africas-workforce\/<\/a><\/br> One out of three<\/a><\/span> tech jobs globally are filled by necessary skilled labor, and according to the World Economic Forum (WEF), this is one of the <\/span>biggest concerns of global business leaders.<\/span><\/p>\n Over 50% of the organizations that these leaders manage, in a survey, say they have lost competitive advantage<\/a> due to talent shortages. The bad news is that the situation might not improve for these companies in the coming years, as the WEF projects that 77% of the 150 million new jobs created by 2030 will require digital skills and young people might not be prepared to fill them<\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n In Africa, hundreds of millions of youths are expected to join the continent\u2019s workforce in the next decade. Over 200 million jobs will require digital skills<\/a> in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the International Finance Corporation. But the challenge <\/span>with Africa\u2019s talent shortage, unlike the rest of the world, is that while the barriers to gaining these digital skills, such as the digital divide and unequal access to quality education, are conspicuous, what\u2019s gone on the radar for so long is upskilling those with digital skills.<\/span><\/p>\n Upskilling employees (from soft skills such as communication, decision making and problem-solving to hard skills showing technical knowledge and foundational skills like teamwork) is a headache that most executives, managers and HR operators across small- to large- African enterprises have had to deal with for several years. And it\u2019s a first-hand frustration that Seni Sulyman<\/a> and Kayode Oyewole<\/a>, both investors and operators, have seen founders complain about during extensive conversations.<\/span><\/p>\n A few years back, Sulyman was the vice president of Global Operations at Andela, where he helped scale the company across Africa and had teams in the U.S. With a decade of experience working at Andela, some Fortune 500 companies in the U.S. and angel investing (including as a venture partner at Ventures Platform) Sulyman clearly understands the role that deliberate growth and development played in improving tech talent.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Same with Oyewole. As a partner at Ventures Platform, a $46 million fund <\/a><\/span>where he helped back many of Africa\u2019s most prominent venture-funded startups \u2014 and as an operator before Ventures Platform, Oyewole is familiar with the difficulty founders and senior leaders face when trying to scale their team\u2019s capabilities to meet evolving needs.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201c<\/span>We had independently been working on overlapping ideas in this space when Kola Aina (founding partner, Ventures Platform) introduced us to each other to have a conversation,\u201d Oyewole said in an interview with TechCrunch. \u201cWe talked to each other extensively for weeks and quickly realized that we share the deeply held belief that investing in upskilling talent to scale companies regionally or globally, with an end goal of creating more jobs and economic output, is Africa\u2019s most important opportunity over the next three decades.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n The operators-cum-investors-cum-founders left their roles to build Talstack<\/a>, an all-in-one platform that enables businesses to upskill their employees with <\/span>competency- and gap-assessment tools<\/span>, content, courses and insights from Africa\u2019s well-known professionals and entrepreneurs.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Typically, most African businesses resort to training agencies when upskilling their employees. However, this limits their access to tailored and specific training programs from top experts, primarily seen in foreign upskilling products, including Udemy, Coursera, LinkedIn Learning, Go1, or verticalized offerings like Masterclass.<\/span><\/p>\n For Oyewole and Sulyman, both options are short-term fixes for Africa\u2019s labor market because they are expensive, lack contextual relevance, and are difficult to connect to specific growth or development outcomes in Africa.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n The reasons are spot on. Even in this age of globalization, where the pandemic increased the appetite for online learning, an African employee working in a B2B e-commerce market cannot learn about the dynamics of that industry from, say, Udemy. In essence, though platforms based in the U.S. have tried to make generalized content and explainers on various skill sets, they miss many nuances concerning operating within different markets. That\u2019s why startups like Platzi<\/a> and UpGrad<\/a> have capitalized on this, creating more curated growth and development products for emerging markets such as Latin America and India, respectively. Talstack, an abstraction from talent stack, <\/span>aims<\/span> to <\/span>replicate<\/span> the <\/span>B2B<\/span> elements of these platforms in<\/span> Africa;<\/span> it might explore a B2C offering similar to other local upskill platforms, including GOMYCODE<\/a> and AltSchool<\/a>, in the future.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201cOur customers and those in the pipeline are telling us that the current learning options they have are not engaging enough for their employees, that the content and insights are not contextually relevant to their people, and that their feedback is not prioritized given Africa is not a priority for global upskilling companies,\u201d said CEO Sulyman, who ran Black Ops, an Andela for operators over the last three years. \u201cWe are building Talstack with insights from the markets where our customers and their employees operate; we are in our customers\u2019 offices, their WhatsApp messages, and their Twitter threads, learning about what drives the most value, iterating and building, quite literally, with them.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Talstack is currently running a closed pilot with eight paying customers (businesses), with at least three employees in each company taking the platform\u2019s \u201cself-paced courses and engaging in the learner community.\u201d Currently, employees in its pilot have access to five courses on soft skills, including \u201cCommunicating Effectively in the Workplace,\u201d \u201cGiving and Receiving Feedback,\u201d \u201cTime Management,\u201d \u201cGoal Setting,\u201d and \u201cProblem-Solving.\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n Sulyman said the startup launched with soft skills because it was a pressing need for the companies in its closed pilot and through their research, \u201csoft skills are the bigger problem for companies today.\u201d He also stated that because these skills are necessary regardless of a company\u2019s department and cut across roles, it was faster to deploy and test some hypotheses. T<\/span>he three-month-old upstart will shortly onboard more professionals as it develops a more robust course catalog to address Africa\u2019s most sought-after cross-functional and domain skills and competencies<\/span>. The upstart also plans to open access to a broader set of employers in the second half of this year.<\/span><\/p>\n Talstack courses are taught by African professionals and operators with operating experience in Africa, working for prominent startups and multinationals such as Andela, MAX, Paystack and Google. Ea<\/span>ch course has several modules in video format (five minutes or less). While Talstack pays these instructors a flat fee <\/span>per course,<\/span>\u00a0it might explore <\/span>sharing its revenue (which it gets from currently charging businesses a monthly subscription of N10,000 (~$13.33) per employee) as it engages a broader set of instructors upon launch.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \u201c<\/span>Many of our current instructors are experienced professionals who already have an appetite for sharing their knowledge and are being viewed as thought leaders. However, there is no scalable way for them to create and deliver courses to a large, engaged audience, which Talstack provides,\u201d said Sulyman, adding that other companies and traditional training agencies can monetize their content on platforms like these professionals.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n On the other hand, employees can access <\/span>tools and a journey map for self-assessment, an active community of other learners and opportunities to interact with these African operators through live Q&As.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n
\nAn investor, an operator, and their plan to upskill Africa\u2019s workforce<\/br>
\n2023-06-15 22:07:37<\/br><\/p>\nOnline courses and mentorship with a local context<\/h2>\n
Backing from local investors to drive experimentation<\/h2>\n