Skills Gaps as a Moving Target: Navigating the 2026 UK Skills Landscape

By Greg Jackson, Director of Education for SRSCC Ltd

Between running a business, managing a workforce, and navigating a volatile economy, the last thing most people have time for is wading through hundreds of pages of government policy. That is why we have done the heavy lifting for you. We have spent the last few weeks reviewing the new Skills England Annual Skills Report and the Financial Services Skills Commission’s (FSSC) 2026 data—collapsing the dense data, policy shifts, and industry assessments into this singular, essential briefing.

You don’t have to read the reports; you just need to know what they mean for your people.

When we talk about “skills gaps” in business, we tend to treat them like potholes in a road. The logic seems simple: find the hole, pour in some transactional training, and consider the problem permanently fixed. But these new reports completely shatter that illusion.

The reality we face this year is that the ground beneath our feet is constantly shifting. Skills are no longer static benchmarks; they are moving targets. As training providers and human development partners at SRSCC Ltd, our job isn’t just to hand out qualifications. It is to help leaders understand how these rapid structural shifts affect their actual human workforces, and how we can navigate them together.

1. What is Happening: The Double-Whammy of Policy and Tech

Right now, British businesses are being squeezed from two completely different directions. On one side, government policy is radically changing how training is funded; on the other, technology is rewriting what it means to do a day’s work.

The End of Generic Management Funding

For years, many companies used their Growth & Skills Levy pots to fund broad, cross-industry leadership courses—like the Level 3 Team Leader or Level 5 Operations Manager standards. It was a reliable fallback for utilising training credits.

However, as of 1 September 2026, Skills England has removed funding for 16 of these generic standards to purposefully force investment into specialised technical gaps. If your business has relied on these courses to develop your people, that funding stream is officially gone.

The Psychological Pressure of the AI Tipping Point

At the exact same time, Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning have moved from experimental tech projects into the everyday infrastructure of the office. This rapid adoption is outpacing human capability, and it is showing up in two startling statistics from the 2026 data:

  • The 47% Adaptability Gap: National data reveals that adaptability has bypassed every single technical skill to become the biggest capability deficit in the UK workforce. The real struggle for workers right now isn’t just learning a specific piece of software; it is the sheer psychological fatigue of having to constantly pivot as their roles change month after month.
  • The 28% AI Deficit: Machine Learning has officially overtaken standard data analysis as the most sought-after technical capability. Employers are desperately hunting for professionals who actually understand how to implement and govern these automated systems, but the supply of talent simply isn’t there.

2. What it Means for Businesses: The Human Risks

When technology shifts this quickly, it creates unintended human consequences within an organisation that a spreadsheet won’t always catch.

As Liam Quinn, a senior HR leader, perfectly framed it during the FSSC review:

“AI didn’t create our current skills limitations. Our structural flaws—the limits of informal learning, the difficulty of scaling reskilling programmes, and a brittle talent pipeline—were already present. AI simply turned the lights on, making those flaws impossible to ignore.”

When you turn those lights on, two major vulnerabilities become visible:

The “Missing Third” and the Disengagement Split

National learning logs reveal a deeply concerning cultural divide: 30% of the UK workforce has not proactively engaged in any voluntary learning over the past six months. They complete their mandated compliance or regulatory training, tick the box, and stop there.

This isn’t a statistic to judge; it’s a symptom of a workforce under pressure. When people are overwhelmed by daily workloads, voluntary upskilling is the first thing they drop. But in an automated marketplace, this creates a dangerous internal split. While your highly motivated “active learners” race ahead with new tools, nearly a third of your team risks being left behind in structural irrelevance, deeply hurting workplace morale, inclusion, and overall productivity.

The Looming “Experience Bottleneck”

In the rush to deploy AI to automate entry-level tasks—like basic data entry, scheduling, or routine administrative compliance—businesses are accidentally destroying their own talent pipelines.

Think about how senior leaders are made. Historically, professionals built critical thinking, intuition, and deep domain expertise by “getting their hands dirty” with high-volume, routine work early in their careers. If we automate all of those tasks away, we remove the bottom rungs of the corporate ladder. In a few years, businesses will face a critical shortage of experienced professionals who possess the maturity required to manage, audit, and supervise the very automated systems they’ve put in place.

3. Steps to Future-Proof: Our Blueprint for a Human-Centric Workforce

Navigating this landscape means moving away from massive, overwhelming, and impersonal training platforms. True resilience requires targeted, human-centred intervention. At SRSCC Ltd, we advise focusing on three core actions:

  • Pivot Spend to Real Technical Specialism: Audit your Levy spend right now. Instead of generic leadership courses, pivot toward profession-specific technical pathways—such as strategic supply chain governance, modern commercial procurement, or automated risk mitigation. This aligns your training spend directly with national economic priorities and protects your funding.
  • Intentionally Design “Experience” Back Into Early Careers: Since AI is consuming traditional entry-level tasks, we have to create new ways for young talent to learn. Redesign your early-career pathways around structured job rotations, cross-departmental projects (“gigs”), and technical apprenticeships. We must deliberately teach the critical thinking and oversight skills that automation bypasses.
  • Re-engage the Overwhelmed 30%: Stop turning on the “content firehose”. Giving employees access to a platform with 40,000 generic video courses doesn’t inspire learning; it causes choice paralysis. Work with managers to identify the exact top gaps in their specific teams, and deliver hyper-personalised, bite-sized, relevant learning that fits naturally into the flow of their working week.

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Skills Gaps as a Moving Target: Navigating the 2026 UK Skills Landscape
2026-06-10T09:17:12+00:00
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Bethanie Stimpson SRSCC

Bethanie Stimpson

Progress Mentor

Bethanie began her career in the fitness industry, working as a personal trainer and gym instructor before becoming involved in coaching children through a triathlon club. This experience sparked her passion for working with young people and ultimately led her into a career in education. She initially worked in a nursery and later as a one-to-one teaching assistant in a primary school, before completing her teaching qualification and postgraduate studies. Since then, Bethanie has taught in both the private and state education sectors.

Her academic background includes a qualification in Sports Development, Fitness and Coaching at college, alongside a Childhood & Youth undergraduate degree (2:1). These studies have enabled her to combine her interests in sport, education, and child development, shaping her holistic approach to teaching and mentoring.

Bethanie is passionate about supporting learners to achieve their goals — educationally, personally, and in terms of wellbeing. She places strong emphasis on communication and relationship building, and takes great pride in helping individuals build confidence and overcome challenges. One of her proudest achievements has been supporting learners who initially doubted themselves to grow in confidence and achieve success.

Outside of work, Bethanie has always maintained a strong interest in sport. She previously competed in triathlons and now focuses on running and swimming. In 2023, she completed the London Marathon — an achievement she is particularly proud of. She also enjoys spending time outdoors with her family and their two dogs, which is where she is happiest when not working.

Ola Kambul

Skills Coach

Ola began her career in supply chain within fast-paced warehouse and logistics environments, where she developed a strong understanding of operations and people management. Her journey into the Supply Chain sector wasn’t planned, but through hands-on experience she discovered a passion for improving processes and supporting others – which naturally led her into training and development.

She has progressed through a range of roles across operations, recruitment, and training, including Programme Coach and L&D Lead. She designed and delivered apprenticeship programmes, supporting over 40 learners to successful completion and contributing to strong quality outcomes and inspection success.  Her transition into mentoring was driven by a desire to make a direct impact on people’s confidence, growth, and career progression.

Ola’s mentoring style is supportive, structured, and empowering. She combines real operational experience with coaching expertise, helping learners apply knowledge in practical workplace settings. One of her proudest career achievements has been supporting learners who started with low confidence to achieve distinctions and progress into new roles within their organisations. She has also led a UK-wide Mental Health First Aider network, embedding wellbeing into workplace culture and supporting colleagues through challenging situations.

From day one, she shares a consistent message with every learner: “You’re more capable than you think – but you have to be willing to step outside your comfort zone to see it.”

Outside of work, Ola enjoys walking with her Border Collie, Luna, and cross stitching. She recommends Legacy by James Kerr to anyone in supply chain, for its powerful insights into leadership and culture. If she wasn’t working in mentoring and development, she would likely be pursuing a career as a Visual Merchandiser.

Jack Callaghan

Jack Moore

Operations Team Leader

In December 2023, Jack joined SRSCC as an Operations Coordinator and quickly established himself as a key member of the team.

Promoted to Team Leader in October 2024, Jack utilises his expertise in auditing processes and innovative problem-solving to identify and enhance growth opportunities.

Jack possesses a strong ability to analyse and refine systems and procedures, consistently uncovering chances for streamlining and automation that drive operational efficiency. He excels at communicating complex ideas with clarity and precision.

Detail-oriented yet big-picture focused, Jack applies his exceptional organisational skills to ensure the team adopts the most effective strategies for achieving both individual and collective goals.

His methodical approach and strategic mindset make Jack an invaluable asset to SRSCC, significantly contributing to the team’s success and the realisation of organisational objectives.