Executive Context
Transformation reshaped banking roles faster than org structures could adapt. Banks needed business analysts with system fluency, IT teams with domain context, and product-oriented profiles capable of end-to-end ownership.
In 2025, many institutions discovered that hiring alone could not close these gaps quickly or sustainably.
Understanding the Difference
Although often used interchangeably, upskilling and reskilling solve different workforce problems.
- Upskilling deepens capability within an existing role (e.g., analysts gaining configuration awareness; IT gaining product/accounting context).
- Reskilling transitions experienced staff into adjacent roles (e.g., ops specialists into functional analysis; IT into product ownership).
Why Hiring Alone Was Not Enough
External recruitment can be valuable, but banks faced practical constraints when relying on it as the primary strategy:
- Limited availability of experienced hybrid profiles
- Long onboarding cycles in complex core banking and payments environments
- High cost and inconsistent retention
- Loss of institutional context compared to internal talent
What Successful Banks Did Differently
Banks that evolved their workforce effectively treated capability building as a structured program tied to live transformation work:
- Defined target roles and competency models aligned to the transformation roadmap
- Built modular learning paths (banking + systems + data + governance) with progressive depth
- Combined classroom learning with scenario-based exercises and project exposure
- Created recognition and progression to reinforce new role identities
Strategic Outcomes Observed
When implemented well, upskilling/reskilling delivered measurable execution benefits:
- Faster ramp-up into critical roles
- Improved collaboration between business and IT
- Higher quality requirements, testing scenarios, and change impact assessments
- Reduced dependency on external resources over time
Academy lens: Experience amplified through structured learning.