Lost and Found: Pathways from disruption to employment – Brookfield Institute for Innovation + Entrepreneurship

About this Report

We face a collective challenge. On one hand, it is essential to enable workers whose jobs may be threatened by disruption to secure gainful employment elsewhere. On the other, it is equally critical to meet the evolving skills demands of local employers so that they can remain competitive. In an ideal scenario, these two forces would overlap. However, traditional responses have not adequately addressed key components of this challenge. While there are many potential alignments between workers looking for jobs and employers looking for talent, a range of barriers prevent workers and employers from becoming aware of, acting on, or successfully realizing these opportunities. 

Even when we can identify promising pathways based on skills and experience rather than job titles and credentials, workers still face a range of barriers to pursuing those pathways successfully. Many factors conspire to keep otherwise suitable workers out of positions that need them, including an individual’s well-being and psychological readiness to pursue new opportunities after job loss; financial and geographic mobility constraints; firm hiring practices; and residual skills gaps and training needs. 

Read this report to help you:
  • Labour market data can be used to identify potential pathways between jobs that are in decline and jobs that offer a more promising future⁠—and that local employers are looking to fill. This project combines data on, for example, the skills required in different occupations, local vacancy rates, overall employment numbers, historic growth, and pay to connect the dots between workers facing disruption at scale and emerging areas of opportunity.
  • However, a data-driven approach is insufficient. The perspectives of workers, trainers, and employers are also needed to determine whether a job transition is likely to work in practice. For example, a person’s identity, psychological readiness, access to social support, and financial and geographic mobility constraints may influence their ability and willingness to consider certain job opportunities. From the employer perspective, ease of recruitment and trusted signals of fit⁠—such as credentials, referrals, and common networks⁠—are equally important. 
  • Policies, services and digital tools that are aiming to identify high-potential job transition pathways and help people move along them should draw on labour market data while putting people at the centre of their design. One-size-fits-all approaches fall short.  
  • This new model can be widely applied. While it focuses on two specific cases (1- Motor Vehicle Assemblers, Testers and Inspectors → Mechanical Engineering Technologists and Technicians and 2- Banking, Insurance and Other Financial Clerks → Financial Sales Representatives), the data and framework can be reoriented to, for instance, help employers and service providers respond to recent or impending layoffs, employers identify new sources of local talent, or policymakers focus resources and tailor programs to respond to emerging areas of opportunity and need.
  • BII+E plans to refine this model through a subsequent phase of human-centred design research that will further explore worker and employer experiences.