The Reality of Skills-Based Hiring Rests on Three Essential Pillars- with Jason Tyszko
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The Reality of Skills-Based Hiring Rests on Three Essential Pillars- with Jason Tyszko

59:01 Mar 18, 2025
About this episode
“We have to move beyond the idea that a skills-based job description is enough—there needs to be validation, assessment, and a clear pathway for job seekers to prove their abilities.”-Jason TyszkoIn this episode of Psych Tech @ Work, I sit down with Jason Tyszko, Senior Vice President of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Foundation, to discuss what it really takes to make skills-based hiring a reality. Jason oversees the Foundation’s T3 Innovation Network, a public-private initiative aimed at creating a more equitable and inclusive job market. T-3 focuses on using digital tools to improve communication between different parts of the job market, ensuring that all learning is recognized and valued.  T-3’s mission to bridge gaps between employers and workers via the advancement of skills-based hiring makes Jason one of the  world’s foremost authorities on the subject.Our conversation is a must for anyone interested in understanding the REALITIES required for true skills-based hiring.  Most conversations on the subject are more hype than substance, but not this one!  Jason takes us deeper into the reality of what it will take to make skills based hiring more than just an empty buzzword.To ground our conversation in a dose of reality, Jason boils success with skills based hiring into these three pillars.* Interoperable Skills Data* To make skills-based hiring a reality, we need standardized, structured, and widely accepted skills data that flows seamlessly across education providers, employers, and workforce systems.* Without interoperability, skills data remains fragmented, making it difficult for employers to assess candidates meaningfully.* Employer Engagement and Adoption* Employers must align job descriptions, hiring processes, and internal mobility pathways around skills rather than degrees or traditional credentials.* Many organizations support skills-based hiring in theory but fail to implement it fully due to ingrained legacy practices.* Technology Infrastructure and Ecosystem Readiness* AI, job-matching platforms, and hiring tools must be built to recognize and evaluate skills accurately, rather than simply filtering candidates based on outdated proxies like job titles or degrees.* Systems should support skills validation, assessment, and transparent career pathways to ensure fair and effective hiring decisions.Jason explains how these pillars support and enable five critical but often ove
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