Digital Transformation in Banking: Closing the Workforce Skills Gap

Discover the skills edge digital leaders have

Digital Transformation in Banking: Closing the Workforce Skills Gap

Discover the skills edge digital leaders have

Digital Transformation in Banking: Closing the Workforce Skills Gap
Home > Insights > Digital Transformation in Banking: Closing the Workforce Skills Gap

Why Skills, Not Software, Decide Success

DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION IN BANKING powers faster product launches, richer customer journeys and sharper compliance. However, most banks still lack enough digitally-skilled employees to execute their bold strategies. Therefore, boards and Chief Digital Officers face one urgent task: close the skills gap before fintechs do.

Deep-dive: Digital Transformation in Telecoms – what banks can learn.

Exhibit 1: Bank workforce digital readiness by region

We found only a handful of what we can consider as workforce digital skills-readiness leaders in the banking sector globally. Most of these were in Europe, North America, or East Asia.

Three Findings From Our 200-Bank Survey

Firstly, only 18 % of banks maintain a formally certified, digitally-ready workforce, so talent—not technology—now limits transformation

Secondly, leader banks, concentrated in Europe, North America and East Asia, employ three times more digitally-skilled people than laggards; consequently, the gap widens each year.

Thirdly, Agile, Scrum and DevOps remain the scarcest capabilities—particularly in the Middle East and Africa—so Open-Banking programs suffer delay after delay.

For background on cross-industry lessons, see our article Digital transformation in telecoms.

Exhibit 2: Comparative maturity of workforce digital skills by country

When looking at the digital skills that are causing the most significant gaps in MEA banks compared to other regions, our survey results show that the MEA region has substantial skills gaps in agile, SCRUM, and DevOps skills.

 

 

Exhibit 3: Workforce digital-skills readiness vs. bank digital-maturity tier

Neobanks had workforces that were 1.7 times more digitally skilled than the digital leader among the traditional banks.

 

Skill Density Beats Headcount

Leader banks deliberately build “full-stack” employees who blend cloud, data-visualisation and agile-facilitation skills. Consequently, one tri-skilled staff member can generate up to four times more validated ideas per quarter than a single-skill peer.

Exhibit 4: Average number of digital skills per digitally ready employee

Digital leader banks have a 1.4 times more digital skills per digitally-skilled employee than laggards.

For instance, Starling Bank and Monzo field small squads where UX designers, data scientists and site-reliability engineers sit side-by-side from day one.

Mind the Leadership-to-Frontline Gap

In contrast, lagging banks show a yawning divide between senior leaders and frontline teams. Meanwhile, critical functions such as IT, Strategic Planning and CX feel the pinch most sharply.

Exhibit 5: Gap in digital readiness between junior and senior staff

Bank digital leaders have closed the gap in digital skills-readiness between their senior management and the general workforce.

Which Skills Are Missing?

Exhibit 6: Readiness by skill type and maturity level

Across all of the ten categories of digital skills we assessed in our survey, digital leader banks were superior.

Additionally, banks short of DevOps talent struggle to automate testing pipelines, while those lacking API-security specialists delay Open-Banking launches.

Where Functions Fall Behind

Because Technology, CX and Strategy units often trail in skill depth, transformation momentum slows just where it should accelerate.

Exhibit 7: Workforce digital readiness by function and maturity level

The gap between bank digital leaders and laggards in workforce digital skills-readiness is smallest in Customer Experience teams and strategy teams.

Exhibit 8: Share of workforce per function vs. global average

Digital leader banks tend to have a larger-than-average Customer Experience, Strategic Planning, IT, and Risk & Compliance teams.

Five Moves for Bank Executive

  • First, audit current skills versus the 2027 tech stack, and create a red-amber-green heat-map.
  • Next, launch a digital academy that blends vendor micro-credentials with live hack-sprints; as a result, retention rises.
  • Then, link promotions to each manager’s upskilling record, so cultural change becomes personal.
  • Afterwards, rotate talent through “lighthouse” projects; short, high-impact tours spread modern methods rapidly.
  • Finally, report progress every quarter using one composite index that tracks certifications, agile velocity and release cadence.

Act Now—Or Watch Fintechs Pass You

Banks investing today in digital transformation in banking will narrow the skills gap, out-innovate fintech challengers and safeguard margin. Therefore, the next move is clear.

Further reading:

To learn more about the strategies employed by digital leader banks, download our white paper: Closing the Digital Skills Gap in the Middle East Banking Industry. Join us on the journey to digital transformation and unlock the full potential of your organization.

Register or Login to continue reading