2. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION2
THEMISSING
MIDDLEDEFINED
In the age of intelligent
technologies, the majority of
jobs will require humans to
work with machines to create
new forms of value.
HUMAN-ONLY
ACTIVITY
MACHINE-ONLY
ACTIVITY
HUMANS
COMPLEMENT
MACHINES
AI GIVES
HUMANS
SUPERPOWERS
HUMAN & MACHINE
HYBRID ACTIVITIES
THE MISSING MIDDLE
3. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 3
HUMANSKILLS
ARESURGING
As economic value
advances, there’s a shift in
importance of human skills
from brawn to brain to
heart to brain.
PRE-INDUSTRIAL
Machine-like
humans
Resource Ingenuity
• Creative use of natural resources
• Managing materials and manual labor
• Physical strength, stamina, body
equilibrium abilities
INDUSTRIAL ERA
Machine automation aids
humans
Operations Management
• Creativity of product and process
design
• Managing operations, personnel,
finances
• Communication, coordination and
organization skills
INFORMATION ERA
Machine data informs
humans
Knowledge Management
• Creativity of service design and
delivery
• Managing data, information
• Analytical reasoning and STEM
(science, technology, engineering,
math) or technical skills
EXPERIENCE ERA
Machine intelligence amplifies
humans
Collaborative Intelligence
• Unconstrained creativity of
Human+Machine
• Managing hyper-relevant experiences
• Socio-emotional intelligence and HEAT
(humanities, engineering, arts,
technology) or multidisciplinary skills
1760s
1970s
2010s
Source: Accenture Research
4. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION4
The importance of creativity, complex reasoning and social-emotional intelligence is rising. Specifically,
more than half of U.S. jobs need higher-level creativity, more than 45% require more complex reasoning,
and nearly one-third need more socio-emotional skills than in the past.
Change in the importance of skill type in U.S. from 2004 to 2016
(100% = 151M jobs in U.S. as of 2016)
Source: Accenture Research analysis of O*NET database
44%
56%
6%
47%
47%
21%
44%
36%
64%
33%
67%
33% 33% 33%
9%
58%
53%
14%
53%
41%
14%
86%
86% 100% 100%
Less important Equally important More important
3%
6% 14%
6. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION6
Accenture identified 10 core intelligences that we all have but that need to be developed further,
based on analysis of extensive academic research in the field.
Intelligence Accenture description adapted from academic literature Academic literature reference
Physical/sensory Physical movement, coordination, flexibility and sensory perception Howard Gardner (1983)
Embodied or extended cognition Ability to internalize technologies and objects in human thought
Andy Clark and David Chalmers (1998), Weisberg
and Newcombe, Dror and Harnard
Strategic
Foresight, visioning, systems thinking, critical thinking, partnering, motivating and
empowering others
Michael Maccoby, Oxford and Harvard Business
Press (2001, 2007)
Practical Ability to use existing knowledge and skills to find solutions and achieve goals Robert Sternberg’s triarchic theory (1997)
Analytical
Ability to analyze, critique, judge, compare, evaluate, assess, including
logical mathematical intelligence
Robert Sternberg’s triarchic theory (1997)
Creative Ability to use knowledge and skills to create, invent, discover, imagine, suppose, predict Robert Sternberg’s triarchic theory (1997)
Interpersonal
Capacity to detect and respond appropriately to feelings, motivations and
desires of others; cooperation and communication ability
Howard Gardner (1983), Harvard University (1999)
Intrapersonal
Capacity to be self-aware and aware of inner feelings, values, beliefs and thinking
processes; understanding of collective intelligence or intuition
Howard Gardner (1983), Gerd Gigerenzer, Max
Planck Institute for Human Development (2011)
Moral
Capacity to understand right from wrong; empathy, compassion, conscience, self-control,
respect, kindness, tolerance, fairness
Michele Borba (2001), Doug Lennick-Fred Kiel
(2005), Beheshtifar, Esmaeli, Moghadam (2011)
Growth mindset
Adaptability and a love of learning; belief that effort or training can change one’s qualities
and traits
Carol Dweck (2000), Stajkovic and others (2015)
8. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION8
In the age of human-machine collaboration, these core intelligences will be critical to the future
workforce. We have mapped them to the Fusion Skills required to work with intelligent machines.
The map helps guide business leaders to direct training efforts and form teams.
Core intelligences underlining human-only and missing middle roles
Core Intelligences
Fusion Skills
Human-
only
activity
Lead
Create
Judge
Empathize
Humans
manage
machines
Re-humanizing Time
Responsible Normalizing
Judgment Integration
Machines
augment
humans
Intelligent Interrogation
Bot-based Empowerment
Holistic Melding
Humans manage machines+
Machines augment humans
Dominant Basic
Source: Accenture Research deconstruction of fusion skills described in “Human+Machine” book authored by Paul R.Daugherty and James H. Wilson.
Interpersonal
9. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 9
DEVELOPINGTHESESKILLS
ANDINTELLIGENCESREQUIRES
FINDINGCOMMONGROUND
Today, 61 percent of activities in the
missing middle require employees to
do different things, and to do things
differently. That means reimagining
processes and committing to lifelong
learning.
But workers and business leaders have
very different perceptions of addressing
the skills gap:
· Business leaders, on average, believe
only about 1/4 of their workforce is
prepared to work with AI and machines.
· 67 percent of workers say they must
develop their own skills to work with
intelligent machines. Ranging from nearly
half of those doing lower-skilled work to
68% of those doing higher-skilled work.
· Many workers feel their companies
should do more to help.
10. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 10
Source: Interview survey of executives in Accenture and Aspen network
When determining the right balance, executives should consider several factors, such as the type of
skills that are needed, whether those skills are in adjacent roles and the urgency of the business need.
Sometimes an outside hire may be the most sensible option.
Readiness
Ability
Value
Change
Openness
Career
Ownership
Skill
Proximity
Skill
Time
Intangible
Value
Tangible Return
on Investment
Reticent about workforce
impact or resistant to
giving support
Evades responsibility for
people development
Has only distant tasks to
offer in new setup
Urgent need of
new skills
Values experience and
diversity of new hires
New hires are lower
overhead or quicker return
Supports people on change
in work within or outside
company
Actively shapes people
development
Makes adjacent tasks
available
Reasonable lead time to
close skill gap
Values intangibles
associated with retained
individual
Views training as a
long-term investment
Employer Employee
Open to change in work
within or outside company
Actively shapes own
career path
Persistent to learn new
adjacent (or remote) skills
Fast learning curve on
new skills
Values intangibles
associated with company
Ready to co-invest time
and resources
Lacks confidence or
concerned by future
workload/pressure
Passively dependent on
employer for career path
Lacks persistence or
aptitude to learn
even adjacent skills
Slow to learn and transition
Otherwise disengaged or
values new experience
outside company
Expects employer to fully
fund skill development
12. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 12
Three dimensions are essential to
successfully developing the human
skills and higher-level intelligences
that will enable human-machine
collaboration:
1. Mutual Readiness: Everyone must be ready to
change and invest in training to prepare for a
world of human-machine partnerships.
2. Accelerated Ability: Educators and learners
must call upon scientific techniques and smart
technologies to learn faster, stretch thinking and
tap latent intelligences.
3. Shared Value: Together, employers and
workers must create and maximize the
motivation to learn and adapt.
13. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 13
Workers and employers must
realize common aspirations in the
new workplace.
Prepare for change: Implement a
long-term strategy and clearly
communicate to employees well in
advance.
Reimagine work: Start by assessing
tasks needed, then map internal
capabilities to these before
developing new skills needed to
bridge talent gaps.
Use AI to tap potential: AI algorithms
can help identify hidden talents and
transferrable skills, helping to make
the most of existing talent.
MUTUALREADINESS
“Our approach to finding
the right person for the job
is focusing on the potential
of the individual for future
challenges, rather than
existing skills and
capabilities.”—David Gaal,
Nestlé Italy Head of Talent
14. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 14
ACCELERATEDABILITY
Accelerated ability — provide
workers with the latest resources
to rapidly enhance human skills.
Use scientific methods: Neuroscience
techniques improve the effectiveness
of learning, especially for more
experienced workers.
Use smart technologies: Virtual reality
(VR) and augmented reality (AR) can
improve levels of immersion, enable
people to experience real situations
and reduce the cost of training.
Teach each other: Encourage
employees to foster new skills through
peer-to-peer learning. This includes
teaching, mentoring or helping to
design learning materials.
“If designed well, AI can make
work itself a growth experience
—projects that offer life-
building knowledge and
support of the individual’s
all-around development.”—
Vivienne Ming, neuroscientist
and co-founder of Socos Lab
15. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 15
SHAREDVALUE
Shared value — create a culture that
values education and lifelong
learning.
Create a sense of well-being about
change: Give people time to adapt and
prepare for new forms of work,
recognizing individual needs.
Co-found learning: Enable people to
pursue their choice of skills development
by subsidizing training programs with
external stakeholders.
Encourage lifelong learning: Track
performance outcomes and levels of
engagement. Combine skills training with
support to navigate new career pathways.
“Ultimately, we will need to
reskill existing employees
as there will soon be a huge
imbalance in supply and
demand. We also have a moral
obligation to train the future
workforce in association with
the broader education
system.”—Kees van der
Vleuten, former Global
Transformation Director, VEON
16. We all need to be ready to change, call
upon scientific techniques and smart
technologies to accelerate learning and
optimize our capacities and embrace a
lifelong learning mindset.
· To make the most effective use of AI, workers need to
develop different, deeper skill sets.
· Leaders are responsible for cultivating the right mindset
and seizing opportunities to train workers.
· Companies must reinvent organizational structures and
processes to allow workers to be part of the process, while
workers must embrace every opportunity to learn—for the
long run.
THEWAY
FORWARD
17. ADVANCING MISSING MIDDLE SKILLS FOR HUMAN–AI COLLABORATION 17
CONTACTINFORMATION
To learn more about how Accenture can help your organization assess its future workforce
needs and adapt future training and reskilling strategies, contact:
Eva Sage-Gavin
Global Managing Director, Talent & Organization, Accenture
eva.sage-gavin@accenture.com
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/evasagegavin
Madhu Vazirani
Thought Leadership Principal Director, Research, Accenture
madhu.vazirani@accenture.com
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/madhu-vazirani-80b7015
Paul Daugherty
Chief Technology & Innovation Officer Technology, Accenture
paul.r.daugherty@accenture.com
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/paul-r-daugherty
Miguel Padro
Senior Program Manager Aspen Institute Business
& Society Program
miguel.padro@accenture.com
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/miguel-padro-824730