A software tool that facilitates internal job movement by listing open roles, matching employees to opportunities based on skills, and supporting managers and HR in managing internal transfers and career transitions.
A skills taxonomy is most effective when it is maintained as a living document rather than treated as a one-time design project: skills change faster than taxonomy update cycles in most organizations, particularly in technology and digital functions where new tools and methodologies emerge faster than annual review schedules can accommodate. The most damaging taxonomy failure mode is technical obsolescence — a taxonomy that still lists legacy programming languages as required skills while emerging frameworks have become the market standard is not just outdated, it is actively harmful, filtering out the candidates who have the skills the organization actually needs in favor of those who match the historical profile. Quarterly review of high-velocity skill categories — technology, AI, data — is the minimum effective maintenance cadence.
What the research says about employee engagement.
Other ways this term appears across industries and languages.
Common questions about employee engagement.