Skip Navigation

Find your skills-first advantage

Learn why -- and how -- making STARs part of your hiring strategy puts you ahead of your peers.

Skills are the currency of the labor market. And STARs have them.

Employers consistently say they can't find workers with the right skills, that they aren't prepared for jobs of the future, and that they worry about their talent pipeline. But many of them are unintentionally limiting their access to talent.

STARs develop valuable skills through alternative routes like community college, training programs, military service, or on the job. Research from Opportunity@Work proves that STARs build skills in lower-wage jobs that overlap significantly with more advanced, higher-wage roles. So why aren't STARs thriving at American companies?

Hiring practices that rely on bachelor’s degree screens, preferred recruiting sources, or personal referrals are using those things as a proxy for skills. Those practices were based in part on the myth that "no degree means no skills", and they helped create the paper ceiling.

Skills-first hiring focuses on a candidate's demonstrated skills and competencies as the primary qualification for a role. It's rooted in a basic idea: the skills you have matter more than where you got them.

Skills-first hiring is a clear advantage

Critics frame the expense of switching to skills-first hiring as prohibitive. They may be missing the very tangible benefits -- and the hidden costs of the status quo.

As much as 80% of employee turnover results from bad hires, as reported by Harvard Business Review.

Meanwhile, research from LinkedIn shows that hiring managers who start with skills are 60% more likely to find a successful hire.

There's more: according to the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), skills-first hiring reduces cost-per-hire by 30%. STARs also improve retention. A report from McKinsey shows that STARs tend to stay 34% longer.

A growing number of companies have identified this as a moment to get ahead. They're removing degree requirements, recruiting from more diverse talent sources, and building internal pathways for STARs to move up into hard-to-fill roles. Will you tear the paper ceiling with them?

Skills-first hiring early adopters

Get inspired by these leading companies that are getting ahead by tearing the paper ceiling and hiring STARs.

Employer Resource Library

Filter By

Skills-Based People Strategy

Skills-Based People Strategy

Shifting your workforce from job-based to skills-based takes more than technology.

Workday

Playbooks

Skills-Based People Strategy

Skills-Based People Strategy

Overcoming the fear factor in hiring

Overcoming the fear factor in hiring

Experience and skill building can open up a much broader pool of candidates.

McKinsey & Company

Research Report

Overcoming the fear factor in hiring

Overcoming the fear factor in hiring

The Business Case for Skills-first Hiring

The Business Case for Skills-first Hiring

Learn why shifting from traditional hiring criteria like education and job titles to focusing on specific skills creates a competitive advantage.

Opportunity@Work

Research Report

The Business Case for Skills-first Hiring

The Business Case for Skills-first Hiring

The American Opportunity Index

The American Opportunity Index

Tools that measure how employers are doing in fostering economic mobility.

Burning Glass Institute

Tools

The American Opportunity Index

The American Opportunity Index

 Invest in Your Workforce

Invest in Your Workforce

Examples of how companies are using education to attract talent.

Guild

Research Report

Invest in Your Workforce

Invest in Your Workforce

Connecting Youth & Business

Connecting Youth & Business

A toolkit to guide employers, step-by-step, on working with opportunity youth.

Gap Foundation

Tools

Connecting Youth & Business

Connecting Youth & Business

No Results Found

Please update your filter parameters.

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.