With a growing digital transformation movement, there are a wealth of new and exciting career and training opportunities for people, regardless of their technical ability, to make our built environment a fairer, more environmentally friendly, and more productive through the National Digital Twin (NDT).
The development of the Information Management Framework (IMF) will drive effective information management across our nationโs built environment. The IMF will enable an ecosystem of connected digital twins, the National Digital Twin (NDT) – where high-quality data about the built environment is shared securely, on a massive scale to improve decision making across the UK.
Over the coming years, the IMF will outline the technical foundations needed to connect and integrate digital twins – digital replicas of physical assets, processes, and systems. The elements that make up the Skills and Competency package, are the people enabler needed to develop and drive adoption of the IMF.
It can be a challenge for companies and HR departments to navigate. TheโฏWorld Economic Forumโฏhas estimated that 40% of core skills will change for workers who remain in their roles, and 50% of employees will need reskilling.โฏGartnerโฏhas found 53% of organisations canโt identify the skills they need to transform their workforce.
We need a future workforce with the right skills to play their part by supporting the secure and resilient exchange of data across organisational and sector boundaries; and make meaningful data-driven decisions. Right now, there is a significant talent gap and a great opportunity to retrain or upskill for a new career path. Theย Skills and Competency Frameworkย andย supporting suite ofย resources,ย outline the roles and skills needed to develop and implement the IMFย and support for organisations and individuals to develop these………………….
