Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Reach Us
    • Career
    Subscribe Newsletter
    HR KathaHR Katha
    • Exclusive
      • Exclusive Features
      • Perspectives
      • Friday Features
      • herSTORY
      • Case-In-Point
      • Point Of View
      • Research
      • HR Pops
      • Dialogue
      • Movement
      • Profile
      • Beyond Work
      • Rising Star
      • By Invitation
    • News
      • Global HR News
      • Compensation & Benefits
      • Diversity
      • Events
      • Gen Y
      • Hiring & Firing
      • HR & Labour Laws
      • Learning & Development
      • Merger & Acquisition
      • Performance Management & Productivity
      • Talent Management
      • Tools & Technology
      • Work-Life Balance
    • Special
      • HR Forecast 2026
      • Cover Story
      • Editorial
      • HR Forecast 2024
      • HR Forecast 2023
      • HR Forecast 2022
      • HR Forecast 2021
      • HR Forecast 2020
      • HR Forecast 2019
      • New Age Learning
      • Coaching and Training
      • Learn-Engage-Transform
    • Magazine
    • Reports
      • Whitepaper
        • HR Forecast 2024 e-mag
        • Future-proofing Manufacturing Through Digital Transformation
        • Employee Healthcare & Wellness Benefits: A Guide for Indian MSMEs
        • Build a Future Ready Organisation For The Road Ahead
        • Employee Experience Strategy
        • HRKatha 2019 Forecast
        • Decoding and Driving Employee Engagement
        • One Platform, Infinite Possibilities
      • Survey Reports
        • Happiness at Work
        • Upskilling for Jobs of the Future
        • The Labour Code 2020
    • Conferences
      • Leadership Summit 2025
      • Rising Star Leadership Awards
      • HRKatha Futurecast
      • Automation.NXT
      • The Great HR Debate
    • HR Jobs
    WhatsApp LinkedIn X (Twitter) Facebook Instagram
    HR KathaHR Katha
    Home»Exclusive Features»Research»69% employers say analytical thinking is the core skill for the workforce in 2025
    Research

    69% employers say analytical thinking is the core skill for the workforce in 2025

    As per the WEF Future of Jobs report 2025, 67% employers say resilience, flexibility and agility are the core skills for the workforce in 2025
    mmBy Liji Narayan | HRKathaJanuary 21, 20253 Mins Read29394 Views
    Share LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp
    analytical skills and analytical thinking
    Share
    LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp

    Analytical skills or analytical thinking has been the top choice for employers when it comes to the core skills for the workforce. In 2023 and 2024, the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs survey had found analytical thinking to be the most sought after core skills by employers.

    The latest edition of the report reveals that 69 per cent of employers feel analytical thinking is the core skill for their workforce in 2025, while 67 per cent feel resilience, flexibility and agility are the core skills. A good 61 per cent feel leadership and social influence skills are the core skills for 2025, while 57 per cent employers feel creative thinking is.

    zoha

    Motivation and self-awareness are the core skills that 52 per cent employers seek in their workforce, while 51 per cent say technological literacy and 50 per cent say empathy and active listening are the core skills for their workforce.

    Half of the employers surveyed said curiosity and lifelong learning are the core skills for 2025, while 47 per cent felt talent management was the core skill.

    This is followed by other skills such as service orientation and customer service, AI and big data (45 per cent), Systems thinking (42 per cent), resource management and operations (41 per ent), dependability and attention to detail (37 per cent), auality control(35 per cent), teaching and mentoring (26 per cent), Networks and cybersecurity (25 per cent), Design and user experience (25 per cent), Multi-lingualism (23 per cent), Marketing and media( 21 per cent), Reading, writing and mathematics (21 per cent), Environmental stewardship (20 per cent), Programming (17 per cnet), Manual dexterity, endurance and precision (14 per cent), Global citizenship (13 per cent), and Sensory-processing abilities(6 per cent), in that order.

    Compared to the 2023 edition of the Future of Jobs report, there have been certain shifts in core skills. In 2025, leadership and social influence, AI and big data, talent management, and service orientation and customer service have all become more relevant. On the other hand, skills such as dependability, attention to detail, and quality control have decreased in importance for employers compared to two years ago. As in the two previous editions of this report, analytical thinking continues to hog the top spot in the list of core skill for employers, with seven out of 10 companies considering it as essential.

    When it comes to specific sectors, the insurance and pensions management industry gives more importance to curiosity and lifelong learning, with 83 per cent of respondents identifying it as a core skill compared to the global average of 50 per cent. Resilience, flexibility and agility are also considered as essential in this sector, with 94 per cent of respondents emphasising their importance versus a global average of 67 per cent.

    The mining and metals industry distinguishes itself with a strong focus on environmental stewardship, as 50 per cebt of respondents view it as a core skill, which two and a half times higher than the global average. The importance of environmental skills is also quite clear in the government and public sector, where it is twice the global average. Both the mining and metals and advanced manufacturing industries place higher importance on manual dexterity, endurance and precision skills compared to other sectors, with roughly 25 per cent of employers stating these as core skills.

    zoha

    Of course, it is predicted that technological skills will grow in importance more rapidly than any other type of skills. By tech skills, the report means artificial intelligence (AI) and big data, which will be the fastest-growing skills, followed by networks and cybersecurity, and technological literacy.

    AI analytical skills analytical thinking artificial intelligence Big Data core skill for 2025 core skills flexibility and agility future of jobs report resilience WEF World Economic Forum
    Share. LinkedIn Twitter Facebook WhatsApp
    mm
    Liji Narayan | HRKatha

    HRKatha prides itself in being a good journalistic product and Liji deserves all the credit for it. Thanks to her, our readers get clean copies to read every morning while our writers are kept on their toes.

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Related Posts

    1,587% surge in AI-agent jobs. Only 32% of workers receive AI training

    May 13, 2026

    Modern people management in a skills-first era

    May 8, 2026

    85% use AI at work. Only 26% feel ready for it

    May 6, 2026

    Women’s workforce participation rises sharply, gig economy emerges as key driver

    April 29, 2026
    Editorial

    Why great ‘Number Twos’ rarely become ‘Number One’

    The pattern is familiar enough that it no longer surprises. A senior leader exits. The…

    The problem isn’t HR. It’s how managers are measured

    The image circulated widely: a professional working from a parked car, laptop balanced precariously, joining…

    EDITOR'S PICKS

    The career moves that didn’t look impressive, until they did

    May 15, 2026

    herSTORY: Divya Mohan, CHRO, InsuranceDekho

    May 14, 2026

    Case-in-Point: Promotion leak vs process integrity

    May 14, 2026

    HR Perspectives by Padma Gupta: “Inclusion strengthens meritocracy rather than weakening it”

    May 13, 2026
    Latest Post

    Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles approve stock incentive plan for employees

    News May 15, 2026

    Tata Motors Passenger Vehicles has approved a new long-term stock-based incentive programme aimed at rewarding…

    Delhi HC: Piece-rate workers can qualify as employees

    News May 15, 2026

    The Delhi High Court has ruled that workers paid on a piece-rate basis can still…

    IndusInd Bank expands hybrid work model for select roles across India

    News May 15, 2026

    IndusInd Bank is preparing to expand a hybrid work model for selected employees across India,…

    K Raheja Corp to foster cross-generational learning with ‘Reverse Mentoring’ programme

    News May 15, 2026

    K Raheja Corp has introduced a new learning and leadership initiative called “Reverse Mentoring,” aimed…

    Asia's No.1 HR Platform

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp Bluesky
    • Our Story
    • Partner with us
    • Career
    • Reach Us
    • Exclusive Features
    • Cover Story
    • Editorial
    • Dive into the Future of Work: Download HRForecast 2024 Now!
    © 2026 HRKatha.com
    • Disclaimer
    • Refunds & Cancellation Policy
    • Terms of Service

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.