Plan now to gain and refine the key skills needed for workplace success and long-term career management!

The National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE) defines career readiness as a foundation from which to demonstrate requisite core competencies that broadly prepare the college-educated for success in the workplace and lifelong career management. 

  • Use these competencies to guide your development with intention! 
  • Assess your strengths, identify areas for improvement, and set goals to continuously refine and enhance your skills and attributes.

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Career Ready Competencies (Action Behaviors)

The eight core competencies below, from NACE, provide a clear framework for understanding what employers value, regardless of your field of study. 

Identify and respond to needs based upon an understanding of situational context and logical analysis of relevant information.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Make decisions and solve problems using sound, inclusive reasoning and judgment.
  • Gather and analyze information from a diverse set of sources and individuals to fully understand a problem.
  • Proactively anticipate needs and prioritize action steps.
  • Accurately summarize and interpret data with an awareness of personal biases that may impact outcomes.
  • Effectively communicate actions and rationale, recognizing the diverse perspectives and lived experiences of stakeholders.
  • Multi-task well in a fast-paced environment.

Clearly and effectively exchange information, ideas, facts, and perspectives with persons inside and outside of an organization.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Understand the importance of and demonstrate verbal, written, and non-verbal/body language, abilities.
  • Employ active listening, persuasion, and influencing skills.
  • Communicate in a clear and organized manner so that others can effectively understand.
  • Frame communication with respect to diversity of learning styles, varied individual communication abilities, and cultural differences.
  • Ask appropriate questions for specific information from supervisors, specialists, and others.
  • Promptly inform relevant others when needing guidance with assigned tasks.

Build and maintain collaborative relationships to work effectively toward common goals, while appreciating diverse viewpoints and shared responsibilities.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Listen carefully to others, taking time to understand and ask appropriate questions without interrupting.
  • Effectively manage conflict, interact with and respect diverse personalities, and meet ambiguity with resilience.
  • Be accountable for individual and team responsibilities and deliverables.
  • Employ personal strengths, knowledge, and talents to complement those of others.
  • Exercise the ability to compromise and be agile.
  • Collaborate with others to achieve common goals.
  • Build strong, positive working relationships with supervisor and team members/coworkers.

Knowing work environments differ greatly, understand and demonstrate effective work habits, and act in the interest of the larger community and workplace.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Act equitably with integrity and accountability to self, others, and the organization.
  • Maintain a positive personal brand in alignment with organization and personal career values.
  • Be present and prepared.
  • Demonstrate dependability (e.g., report consistently for work or meetings).
  • Prioritize and complete tasks to accomplish organizational goals.
  • Consistently meet or exceed goals and expectations.
  • Have an attention to detail, resulting in few if any errors in their work.
  • Show a high level of dedication toward doing a good job.

Understand and leverage technologies ethically to enhance efficiencies, complete tasks, and accomplish goals.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Navigate change and be open to learning new technologies.
  • Use technology to improve efficiency and productivity of their work.
  • Identify appropriate technology for completing specific tasks.
  • Manage technology to integrate information to support relevant, effective, and timely decision-making.
  • Quickly adapt to new or unfamiliar technologies.
  • Manipulate information, construct ideas, and use technology to achieve strategic goals.

Demonstrate the awareness, attitude, knowledge, and skills required to equitably engage and include people from different cultures and backgrounds.. Engage in anti-oppressive practices that actively challenge the systems, structures, and policies of racism and inequity.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Solicit and use feedback from multiple cultural perspectives to make inclusive and equity-minded decisions.
  • Actively contribute to inclusive and equitable practices that influence individual and systemic change.
  • Advocate for inclusion, equitable practices, justice, and empowerment for historically marginalized communities.
  • Seek global cross-cultural interactions and experiences that enhance one’s understanding of people from different demographic groups and that leads to personal growth.
  • Keep an open mind to diverse ideas and new ways of thinking.
  • Identify resources and eliminate barriers resulting from individual and systemic racism, inequities, and biases.
  • Demonstrate flexibility by adapting to diverse environments.
  • Address systems of privilege that limit opportunities for members of historically marginalized communities.

Proactively develop oneself and one’s career through continual personal and professional learning, awareness of one’s strengths and weaknesses, navigation of career opportunities, and networking to build relationships within and without one’s organization.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Show an awareness of own strengths and areas for development.
  • Identify areas for continual growth while pursuing and applying feedback.
  • Develop plans and goals for one’s future career.
  • Professionally advocate for oneself and others.
  • Display curiosity; seek out opportunities to learn.
  • Assume duties or positions that will help one progress professionally.
  • Establish, maintain, and/or leverage relationships with people who can help one professionally.
  • Seek and embrace development opportunities.
  • Voluntarily participate in further education, training, or other events to support one’s career.

Recognize and capitalize on personal and team strengths to achieve organizational goals.

What does this look like in action? 

  • Inspire, persuade, and motivate self and others under a shared vision.
  • Seek out and leverage diverse resources and feedback from others to inform direction.
  • Use innovative thinking to go beyond traditional methods.
  • Serve as a role model to others by approaching tasks with confidence and a positive attitude.
  • Motivate and inspire others by encouraging them and by building mutual trust.
  • Plan, initiate, manage, complete and evaluate projects.

Reprinted courtesy of the National Association of Colleges and Employers.

According to the NACE Job Outlook Survey 2023, employers shared:

When considering the eight career readiness competencies, employers rate communication (4.49) and critical thinking (4.46) most important. In addition, only two competencies—career and self-development (3.81) and leadership (3.65)—fall below 4 (very important) on a 1-to-5 importance scale.

Unfortunately, all employers’ proficiency ratings of recent graduates fall below 4 (very proficient) on a 1-to-5 point proficiency scale. However, graduates’ ratings in technology (3.98), equity and inclusion (3.97), and teamwork (3.84) are closest, receiving the highest proficiency ratings from employers. 

When comparing importance to proficiency ratings of recent college graduates, large gaps are evident in the top two competencies that employers rate most important (communication and critical thinking). Additionally, another large gap appears in the professionalism competency, with 91.2% of employers rating it very or extremely important and just 48.6% rating graduates as very or extremely proficient in it. Technology is the only competency for which employers rated recent college graduates higher in proficiency (76.8% of respondents) than they rated the importance of the competency (74% of respondents). 

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Tell Your Story 

Describe, Develop, and Design your career path that builds upon your unique strengths and the career ready competencies you already possess and will gain. 

Describe

Identify and add to your current skills and competencies. 

Design 

Your skills are portable across many industries. Research your fit. 

Resources for Faculty/Staff

Connect course learning to the BSOS Career Ready competencies

Assignments: Explore ways to connect in-class learning to post-graduation opportunities.

Connect your course syllabus or assignments to career competencies.

Request a BSOS Career Ready class outreach 

Support Materials: Share with students: