scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessPosted Content

The Mismanagement of Talent: Employability and Jobs in the Knowledge Economy

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The Mismanagement of Talent as mentioned in this paper argues that talent is being mismanaged by employers that have yet to come to terms with the realities and possibilities of mass higher education and argues that some graduates are playing 'the game' to win a competitive advantage and what really happens in the selection events of leading-edge employers.
Abstract
The knowledge economy conjures a world of smart people, in smart jobs, doing smart things, in smart ways, for smart money, a world increasingly open to all rather than a few. Glossy corporate brochures present a future in challenging, exciting and financially rewarding jobs for the winners in the competition for fast track management appointments. They also convey an image of enlightened employers actively seeking to diversify their talent pool, reflected in their approach to identifying, hiring and retaining outstanding talent. We are told that the challenge confronting governments around the world is to enhance the employability of the workforce. Every effort must be made to expand access to higher education, dismantle barriers to talent regardless of social circumstances, gender, or skin colour, and to harness human creativity and enterprise to meet the demands of the new economy. The Mismanagement of Talent comes to a different conclusion. Those leaving the world of mass higher education find themselves in a scramble for jobs with rising stakes for the winners and losers. The Mismanagement of Talent examines what determines the outcome of this race when a degree loses its badge of distinction. It shows how some graduates are playing 'the game' to win a competitive advantage and what really happens in the selection events of leading-edge employers. It also argues that talent is being mismanaged by employers that have yet to come to terms with the realities and possibilities of mass higher education. The Mismanagement of Talent will be thought-provoking and controversial reading for those involved in the recruitment of graduates, and those concerned with the way knowledge-based firms recruit and the impact of higher education policy: Professionals working in university careers services, HRM, training, or recruitment generally; Researchers, academics, or students of Business and Management, Human Resource Management, Public Policy, Education, or Sociology; and Job candidates themselves - the 'players' and 'purists' described in the book.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

“The ability to get a job”: student understandings and definitions of employability

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore employability in the context of higher education from the students' perspective and find that students' articulations of employability expanded in vocabulary as they progressed through their studies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Employment, Employability and Higher Education in India: The Missing Links

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focus on analyzing the growth and changing structure of the Indian higher education system in the light of the education profile of Indian jobseekers, labour market demands and the employability index for India's high-growth sectors on the basis of existing skill gaps and suggest a broad pathway to plug in the gaps and missing links.
Journal ArticleDOI

Open Region: Creating and exploiting opportunities for innovation at the regional scale:

TL;DR: Open Region as discussed by the authors is a heuristic way of thinking about proactive policy measures for redesigning the dialectic interplay between territorial openness and closure, in essence, aim at creating and exploiting opportunities for innovation within a region by mobilising externa.

The Impact of Employment of Foreign Workers: Local Employability and Trade Union Roles in Malaysia

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on the preliminary findings on employment status of local workforce and trade union rights affected by employment of foreign workers and make a number of recommendations, including the need for further development on reducing the employment of Foreign workers and more refined targeting of vulnerable foreign workers linked with labor.