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Employers are increasingly saying you don't need a college degree to get hired, but secretly, you still kind of do. During the same period, the share of job postings asking for a college degree or higher fell to 17.8% from 20.4%. In 2023, The New York Times' editorial board applauded various efforts in the public and private sectors to ax degree requirements for jobs. Having inflated degree requirements perpetuates the cycle of inequities in the workforce." A move toward skills-based hiring is a good thing socially, economically, and practically.
Persons: George Floyd's, didn't, It's, Matt Sigelman, Cory Stahle, would've, you've Organizations: aren't, The New York Times, Carlton, Harvard Business School, Glass, Apple, Walmart, ExxonMobil, Glass Institute, Employers
But as data emerges on degreeless hiring, there are signs that some of these efforts may be falling short. It's based on limited data and doesn't consider alternative pathways that people without degrees use to join organizations, such as through apprenticeships and internships. But it's still a snapshot look at how some of the top employers in the U.S. are doing in their efforts to hire more workers based on skills versus degree attainment. Rather, it implies managers may be reticent to hire people without degrees, absent specific policies to assess these workers' skills. Companies that have been successful with skill-based hiring also articulate clearly the skills they require for a job, even before posting it.
Persons: it's, Matt Sigelman, What's, Sigelman, Schultz, Joseph Fuller, Fuller, Tyson, Lockheed Martin, Kroger, Stellantis, Backsliders, Meijer, Delta Organizations: Burning Glass Institute, Harvard Business School, Glass Institute, Workers, American, Foundation, Walmart, Apple, GM, Koch Industries, General Motors, Target, Tyson Foods, ExxonMobil, Yelp, Bank of America, Oracle, Companies, Lockheed, Stellantis, CNBC, Amazon, Nike, Delta, Uber, HSBC, Novartis, Delta Air Lines, US Foods Locations: U.S, Meijer
A new generation of artificial intelligence is poised to turn old assumptions about technology on their head. For years, people working in warehouses or fast food restaurants worried that automation could eliminate their jobs. But new research suggests that generative A.I. — the kind used in chatbots like OpenAI’s ChatGPT — will have its biggest impact on white-collar workers with high-paying jobs in industries like banking and tech. “There’s no question the workers who will be impacted most are those with college degrees, and those are the people who always thought they were safe,” said Matt Sigelman, president of the Burning Glass Institute.
Persons: , , Matt Sigelman Organizations: Burning Glass, Society for Human Resource Management, Glass Institute
10 smaller US cities with booming tech scenes
  + stars: | 2023-10-30 | by ( Jordan Pandy | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +2 min
Three metros in Utah are among the mid-size cities with the most advanced tech talent. From that list, it then ranked cities by their share of tech workers with at least one of the in-demand tech skills previously identified. Cities with more to offer than just a robust tech scene scored high in where advanced tech talent is concentrating. Fayetteville, Arkansas, which ranked as the mid-size city with the second-highest concentration of advanced tech talent, has attracted tech workers seeking a more laid-back lifestyle than larger cities with a high concentration of tech talent, like Austin, Texas . Here are the top 10 mid-size cities ranked by their concentration of advanced tech workers, according to the Burning Glass Institute.
Persons: , San, Matt Sigelman, Ann Organizations: Service, Burning Glass, Street Journal, Glass Institute, Journal . Tech Locations: Fayetteville , Arkansas, Rochester , New York, Utah, San Francisco, Seattle, Provo , Utah, Ann Arbor , Michigan, Boise City , Idaho, Salt Lake City , Utah, Austin , Texas
Yes, a College Degree Is Still Worth It
  + stars: | 2023-05-20 | by ( Jeffrey Selingo | Matt Sigelman | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
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Data research company the Burning Glass Institute, Harvard Business School and the Schultz Family Foundation recently ranked the 250 biggest U.S. public companies in terms of this kind of investment. Of all of the companies they surveyed, one stood out as the best place to grow your career: telecommunications giant AT&T. "In fact, less than 5% of all roles at AT&T require a college degree." "Additionally, of the roughly 45,000 roles we filled across the business in 2022, nearly 50% were filled by existing employees." Check out:The 10 best U.S. places to work in 2023, according to GlassdoorWant to land a remote job in 2023?
The company was among the best for career stability and growing talent. It ranked among the best companies for career launchpad, career stability and advancement without a degree. MicrosoftTech giant Microsoft came in among the top companies for career stability, growing talent and advancement without a degree. It ranked among the best companies for career launchpad, career stability and advancement without a degree. It ranked among the best companies for career launchpad, career stability, growing talent and advancement without a degree.
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