iTnews
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Training & Development

Woolworths develops skills 'GPS' for Group IT

By Ry Crozier on Nov 20, 2019 6:51AM
Woolworths develops skills 'GPS' for Group IT

IT Career Framework charts future staff development paths.

Woolworths is set to expand its use of a career framework developed by Group IT to other business units after the company’s technologists rated it positively as a career development tool.

The retailer said last week that the IT career framework was developed by its IT Culture and People team to “act as a GPS to enable team members to plan, implement, and steer their career journey with Woolworths IT.” 

“At its core, the framework provides our team with a greater understanding of the skills, capabilities, and experiences required in their current and aspirational roles,” the company told iTnews.

“This clarity allows team members to create functional development plans to become more effective in their current role or build skills for their next role.”

The framework comprises several “key elements”.

It contains IT career maps that show horizontal and vertical career options, “including progression across IT career streams”.

It also profiles “broad expectations of accountability and behaviour by level across all IT career streams” as well as more specific expectations for what it calls “key IT anchor positions”.

The framework also offers staff external career development support via a partnership with the Australian Computer Society (ACS), which likely explains why the framework is a finalist in an ACS awards programme.

Woolworths’ IT staff are able to benchmark their skills against the Skills Framework for the Information Age (SFIA), which is the basis of national IT skills certifications in Australia and abroad.

“Once team members assess their skills and compare them to their current or aspirational role, they receive a suggested development plan through our partnership with ACS,” Woolworths said.

The retailer said it had run “a number” of IT career framework workshops with staff. “To date, more than half the IT team have attended a session,” it said.

Other evidence that the framework had been positively received came from Woolworths’ ‘Voice of Team’ employee engagement survey in March this year, where a “positive uplift in the career development category” was recorded.

Other business units within Woolworths are understood to now be looking to apply the framework in their own areas.

Woolworths also said it had received external interest in the framework.

“There are many diverse career paths available to IT professionals and mapping out where you want to go and how you get there can be daunting, particularly early on in your career,” Woolworths CIO John Hunt said in a statement to iTnews.

“We’ve developed the IT career framework to empower our team to really take control of their career and professional development.

“The framework provides our team with a greater understanding of the career pathing and associated roles available, underpinned with the necessary skills, capabilities, and experiences required to realise their aspirations. 

“This is an area I’m very passionate about and the framework is a piece of work we are really proud to have developed.”

Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.
Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.
Tags:
acscareerdevelopmentitskillstrainingtraining & developmentwoolworths

Partner Content

Why rethinking your CMS is crucial for customer retention
Promoted Content Why rethinking your CMS is crucial for customer retention
Security: Understanding the fundamentals of governance, risk & compliance
Promoted Content Security: Understanding the fundamentals of governance, risk & compliance
Accenture and Google Cloud team up to create a loveable, Australian-first, renewable energy product
Promoted Content Accenture and Google Cloud team up to create a loveable, Australian-first, renewable energy product
Security "mindset shift" needed to protect organisations
Promoted Content Security "mindset shift" needed to protect organisations

Sponsored Whitepapers

Free eBook: Digital Transformation 101 – for banks
Free eBook: Digital Transformation 101 – for banks
Why financial services need to tackle their Middle Office
Why financial services need to tackle their Middle Office
Learn: The latest way to transfer files between customers
Learn: The latest way to transfer files between customers
Extracting the value of data using Unified Observability
Extracting the value of data using Unified Observability
Planning before the breach: You can’t protect what you can’t see
Planning before the breach: You can’t protect what you can’t see

Events

  • Forrester Technology & Innovation Asia Pacific 2022
By Ry Crozier
Nov 20 2019
6:51AM
0 Comments

Related Articles

  • Woolworths backs staff skill development in Agile, analytics
  • ANZ data and automation group executive Emma Gray to leave
  • Virgin Australia finds new head of technology
  • Victoria University to host Australia's first SAP Academy
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on Whatsapp Email A Friend

Most Read Articles

NSW Police dumps Bezos-backed Mark43 from core systems overhaul

NSW Police dumps Bezos-backed Mark43 from core systems overhaul

Australian court finds insurer not liable for ransomware clean-up costs

Australian court finds insurer not liable for ransomware clean-up costs

NBN Co proposes to axe CVC across all plans by mid-2026

NBN Co proposes to axe CVC across all plans by mid-2026

ADHA extends Accenture's My Health Record support deal for $100m

ADHA extends Accenture's My Health Record support deal for $100m

Digital Nation

Metaverses on the agenda for Dominello, Husic ministerial meeting
Metaverses on the agenda for Dominello, Husic ministerial meeting
Australia will lose 11 percent of jobs to automation by 2040: Forrester
Australia will lose 11 percent of jobs to automation by 2040: Forrester
Domino’s invests in observability for zero contact delivery
Domino’s invests in observability for zero contact delivery
COVER STORY: How KPMG, Mirvac and ASX use blockchain to build trust in the property sector
COVER STORY: How KPMG, Mirvac and ASX use blockchain to build trust in the property sector
Criteo to fork out $94.7m for consent breaches
Criteo to fork out $94.7m for consent breaches
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form without prior authorisation.
Your use of this website constitutes acceptance of nextmedia's Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.