The process of helping employees develop additional or more advanced skills in their existing field — enabling them to take on greater responsibility, higher-complexity work, or expanded roles within the organization.
Upskilling investments produce the highest returns when targeted at the specific skills that will increase an employee's productivity in their current role within the next 6 to 12 months — not at skills they might use in a future role that has not yet been defined. The most common upskilling program design failure is building curricula around skills the organization hopes employees will need rather than those they demonstrably need now: the result is training that does not transfer to behavior change because there is no immediate application context to reinforce what was learned. Connecting upskilling program design to real performance gaps identified through manager feedback, error rate analysis, or capability assessment is the design discipline separating programs with measurable skill change from those producing only completion statistics.
What the research says about employee engagement.
Other ways this term appears across industries and languages.
Common questions about employee engagement.