1. What is an employee skills assessment?
2. Why are skills assessments so important?
3. Who are skills assessments for?
4. How do skills assessments measure competency?
5. What do I do with all this information?
Employee skills assessment =
"A performance-check that allows an employee to prove their knowledge and competence for a given task."
It’s a pretty simple concept with a broad application in a lot of different industries - it’s clearly essential to be able to confirm that employees are competent.
But how do employee skills assessments impact deskless teams in the manufacturing industry?
In manufacturing, making sure that people are capable of performing complex and potentially dangerous tasks like operating machinery is absolutely crucial. Skills assessments are a way for managers and supervisors to check and certify that their employees have the expertise to perform their jobs safely and accurately, every time.
But skills assessments are also a way to help drive skills development from a bottom-up perspective. In the past, these practices have often been very top-down and neglect to include the frontline as an essential component in their own skills development.
There are a few methods that can be used to understand performance on the shop floor:
We’ll be focusing on the last two types of assessments in this article, due to their ease of integration with a digital skills management system and their ability to populate tools like a dynamic digital skills matrix.
These are performance checks initiated by employees in order to prove and validate their competency on a given task.
These are in-person performance checks performed on the shop floor and validated by a manager or supervisor.
As a whole - Employee skills assessments help to involve and empower the frontline workforce while driving upskilling on the shop floor.
The simple answer? Proving that your frontline workforce is competent. Seems simple enough, but this basic premise is at the core of improving shift planning, error-reduction, compliance, and onboarding.
Successful skills development depends on having an understanding of your teams and their capabilities. Skills assessments allow you to demonstrate this baseline in a consistent way, while also giving supervisors the ability to validate the results to align with standards and compliance.
Effective skills management and upskilling depends on having accurate information about the abilities of a given employee or team. Once an employee has established their competency, the appropriate learning materials can be delivered to educate and upskill.
When competence is accurately reflected in a skills matrix, supervisors can more effectively plan shifts and flex their teams where they’re needed.
If you have a system that allows you to track and perform skills assessments digitally and on mobile devices, it’s much easier to gauge competencies at the production line and on the shop floor.
Self-assessments are a tool that allows individual employees to certify new skills and expand their career perspective - something that’s essential for them to feel valued and keep them engaged.
The power of skills assessments lies in your ability to observe your workforce performing their job, and validating this performance against a benchmark. It’s essential to have a set of clearly defined skill levels correlated to an employee’s performance.
Once a supervisor has signed off on an assessment and delivered the relevant feedback, they can be assigned a skill level that will ultimately be used to populate a digital skills matrix.
Examples of common skill levels in manufacturing:
This system allows you to understand competency at a glance - not just to fill skills gaps and flex your teams, but to understand areas for improvement and practice proactive skills development.
Self-assessments are performance checks initiated by employees to prove their own competence and check their knowledge about a given subject.
Okay, but why?
These assessments use the same skill levels as above but are driven by the employee, rather than a manager or supervisor. Self-assessments are attached to specific skills and require employees to evaluate their own ability to perform a task.
It’s worth noting that it’s essential for these self-evaluations to be reviewed and validated by a supervisor. If needed, they can be followed up with more in-depth Skills Assessments or feedback.
The ultimate goal of employee skills assessments is to manage and understand the competencies of your frontline workforce. But this data is irrelevant if it’s hard to use or sits in an excel document. When used in combination with a digital tool like a dynamic skills matrix, you’ll be able to track performance and skills gaps with up-to-date and accurate skills profiles.
You can:
👉 Here are the benefits of a dynamic digital skills matrix.
👉 Here's a great free template to help coordinate employee development.
👉 Here's a breakdown of reskilling vs. upskilling (and the importance of each) at the frontline.