Hip-hop performers are sometimes said to have "mad
skills" and this is a good thing. I'm hearing about what might be called "mad
deskilling".
It is not a good thing.
More often in global outsourcing these days the
rather artless (literally) words deskill and deskilling are being bandied
about. The dictionary defines deskilling as "the elimination of the need for
skilled labor in an industry, especially by the introduction of high
technology". It also refers to the downgrade of a job or occupation from a
skilled to a semiskilled or unskilled position.
You can guess how I feel about this. I neither like
nor agree with the assertion that jobs can be dumbed down to the point that they
can be performed in a piecemeal manner. Performed more efficiently? Sure. But
done without any design, master plan or measurement? Absolutely not.
Collaborative work is work done as part of a group.
And that means there's a shared goal or at least a common purpose. As with
almost any group activity there is some element of social interaction to the
work in addition to the task fulfillment. Trust comes into it.
Again, there are absolutely some work processes
that are candidates for simplification and streamlining - to the point that
they can be performed by lesser-skilled people. Automation helps.
But if the outsourcing and offshoring industry
insists on deskilling work processes as a core strategy for making work
portable, how will the aggregate value of process transformation ever come
about? And where's the much ballyhooed
value "beyond the scope of work" going to come from in such an environment?
The No. 1 concern we hear today from clients is
employee turnover. They view the churn at their service providers as a significant
business risk. They're right. And emphasizing deskilling is part of what's
creating this risk. I believe the workers who make up the global
sourcing industry are looking for challenges, not rote tasks. They want to be part of an industry that adds
value, not just acts as worker bees optimizing a task to the point of marginal
cost.
Beware
of the mad deskillings!