Employers, organisational leaders and human resources management professionals, especially in my generation, complain about the quality of school-leavers and graduates in our organisations – weak communication skills, poor work ethic, limited critical thinking, and a general lack of professional readiness.
For a long time, like many others, I assumed this was simply the reality of the system. But over time, it became clear that complaining about the problem and hoping that it would get better does not solve it. If anything, it reinforces a passive mindset that leads to things only getting worse!
“This gap is evident in many education systems today. Public schools are under-resourced, overstretched, and struggling to deliver even basic learning outcomes.”
This realisation led us to make a deliberate shift – to “backward integrate” into the talent pipeline by developing life skills education programmes and resources targeted at children and youth.
The idea was simple: if the output is weak, then the input must be addressed much earlier.
Most organisations respond to talent quality issues at the point of entry, and many argue about the value of better alignment between university curricula and industry needs. They invest in internships, graduate trainee programmes, and onboarding academies. These interventions are valuable and should be sustained. However, they happen when development scholars all agree that it may be a bit too late and largely operate as selection mechanisms – cherry-picking the best from an already limited pool. They do little to expand the size or quality of that pool. If the overall pipeline is weak, then even the “best” candidates may still fall short of what organisations need. This is why the conversation must shift from hiring talent to fixing the pipeline at its foundation.
Research strongly supports the importance of foundational life skills. Daniel Goleman demonstrated that competencies such as self-awareness, self-regulation, motivation, empathy, and social skills are critical determinants of workplace success, more so than technical ability. At the same time, Ken Robinson famously argued that traditional education systems are structured in ways that limit creativity and suppress innovation, emphasising conformity over originality. Together, these insights highlight a fundamental gap: the very capabilities organisations need are often the ones least developed by formal schooling.
This gap is evident in many education systems today. Public schools are under-resourced, overstretched, and struggling to deliver even basic learning outcomes. At the same time, the proliferation of private schools has introduced its own challenges, with increasing commercialisation and a focus on credentials over character. The result is a system that produces graduates who may be credentialled but are often ill-prepared for the demands of the workplace and society.
What is missing is a deliberate focus on life skills – the practical capabilities that enable individuals to function effectively in real-world environments. These include communication, critical thinking, problem-solving, creativity and innovation, leadership, personal effectiveness, financial literacy, and civic awareness. These are not abstract or academic constructs; they are applied skills that shape how individuals think, behave, and make decisions.
Importantly, these skills are not constrained by age in the way traditional academic subjects often are. While mathematics or physics may follow a structured, age-based progression, life skills can be introduced, developed, and reinforced at virtually any stage of life. A child can begin to learn leadership, responsibility, communication, and financial literacy just as meaningfully as a university student or working professional. The earlier this exposure happens, the stronger the foundation. But even later interventions can still be impactful when they are practical and sustained.
The implication for organisations is profound. If the capabilities that drive workplace performance are developed early, then waiting until individuals enter the workforce is often too late. Training programmes at that stage are frequently trying to correct deeply ingrained habits and attitudes, which is significantly more difficult and less effective. Organisations must therefore begin to see themselves not just as consumers of talent but as contributors to its development.
Forward-looking organisations are already beginning to do this by partnering with institutions that understand these gaps and can deliver structured life skills interventions. These partnerships go beyond internships and graduate trainee programmes. They involve engaging with schools, supporting youth-focused learning initiatives, and investing in programmes that build practical capabilities over time. Increasingly, this should form part of corporate social investment strategies, where organisations allocate resources not just to visibility projects but to interventions that create lasting impact on human capital development.
This is not about replacing the education system but complementing it. Organisations bring practical insight, workplace context, and a focus on application that traditional curricula often lack. By engaging earlier and more intentionally, they can help shape individuals who are not just employable but effective.
The choice is clear. Organisations can continue to complain about the quality of graduates, or they can become active participants in fixing the education-to-talent pipeline. Internships and graduate trainee programmes will always have a role to play, but they are not enough. If we want a stronger workforce, we must start earlier, build better, and sustain our efforts over time. In the end, the future of work will not be determined only by who we hire but by what we choose to build.
Omagbitse Barrow is the chief executive of Efiko Management Consulting, and he supports organisations and leaders to translate their strategy to results.
