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The New Resume: Why Skills Now Matter More Than Degrees

By Yogita Tulsiani

For decades, the college degree was the ultimate passport to professional success is a symbol of discipline, intelligence, and opportunity. It told employers who were “qualified,” who deserved the interview, and who would likely succeed. But that once-reliable signal is fading. As industries digitise and automation accelerates, the relationship between education and employability has begun to fracture.

Today, the half-life of knowledge is shrinking. Entire job categories are being redefined by technology, and new ones from AI operations to digital product design are emerging faster than universities can adapt. The traditional degree, built for a slower era, can no longer keep up with the fluid demands of the modern workplace. What matters now is not just what you know, but what you can do, and how quickly you can learn, unlearn, and relearn.

Across global boardrooms and Indian startups alike, résumés are being rewritten. Recruiters are valuing demonstrable skills over static credentials, projects over papers, and outcomes over institutions. The world of work is shifting from pedigree to performance, and in this new meritocracy, skills have become the real currency of success.

Shift In Labour Market: What’s Changed

Several structural forces are driving a recalibration of how we evaluate talent.

  • Technology and disruption. Automation, AI and digital transformation are altering job profiles faster than traditional education systems can keep up. As one study explains, emerging fields such as AI and “green jobs” show growing demand for specific skill-sets while degree requirements are declining. 
  • Degree inflation and credential saturation. With more people holding degrees than ever before, the signalling value of a certificate has weakened in many contexts. The phenomenon of “credential inflation” – where jobs require increasingly higher credentials without concomitant increases in job complexity – is well documented.
  • Skills-based hiring gains traction. Employers are increasingly adopting “skills-first” hiring strategies: asking not “what degree do you hold?” but “what can you do, and how quickly can you learn?” For example, the Corporate Finance Institute notes that major firms such as IBM, Microsoft and General Motors have reduced or removed four-year degree requirements when the role doesn’t necessitate it.
  • Global and Indian context. While much of the commentary comes from Western markets, the trend is relevant globally, including in India, where skills gaps, rapidly evolving tech jobs, and rising education costs mean many learners and workers are rethinking the value proposition of degrees.

Why Skills Are Gaining Importance

What exactly is driving the shift? A few key reasons:

  • Direct relevance vs. signalling. A degree has long served as a signal of trainability, discipline and some baseline knowledge. But employers increasingly care about whether a candidate can deliver, i.e., perform tasks relevant to the role, adapt, and learn quickly. Skills are a more direct proxy for that. 
  • Shorter learning cycles & modular credentials. With rapid change in skills required, shorter, focused credentials (bootcamps, micro-credentials, certifications) allow faster updating than multi-year degree programmes.
  • Broader access and diversity. Focusing on skills lowers barriers for talent from non-traditional educational backgrounds, increasing diversity and allowing firms to tap pools that might be overlooked if degrees were required.
  • Better internal mobility and flexibility. Employers adopting skills-based frameworks can redeploy or upskill existing staff rather than always hiring new degree-holders. This improves efficiency and responsiveness.
  • Mismatch between what degrees teach and what jobs need. Many degree courses focus on theory rather than immediately applicable skills; as one article puts it: “A degree can help you get a job, but skills are what will keep you in the running.
  • Where degrees still matter, and won’t disappear

Before we conclude that degrees are obsolete, it’s important to nuance the argument. Degrees continue to have value, in some fields and for certain roles, and for foundational learning.

  • Professionally regulated fields. Medicine, law, certain engineering disciplines, university-teaching roles, etc, require accredited degrees (and licensure) and are unlikely to shift solely to skills in the short run.
  • Broad foundational knowledge. A degree often exposes learners to a wider base of knowledge (critical thinking, research, exposure beyond narrow work tasks), which still holds value in many careers.
  • Screening benefit. For many employers, degrees still serve as an efficient screening tool for basic trainability or as a filter when candidate pools are large.
  • Status and signalling. Although the signalling value is declining, degrees still carry social prestige and can open doors (especially in certain markets and hierarchies).
  • The hybrid approach wins. Many commentators argue that the ideal is not a degree or skills, but a combination: a good degree plus strong, relevant skills.

What This Means For Stakeholders

For job-seekers/learners:

  • Don’t rely solely on having a degree. Make sure you build tangible skills, ideally mapped to industry demand (technical + soft skills).
  • Develop learning agility, the ability to pick up new skills quickly, and adapt to changing job requirements. This is increasingly a top differentiator.
  • Use alternative credentials to complement or substitute part of the traditional path: certifications, boot-camps, project-portfolios, internships.
  • When choosing a degree, think about how you will link it to applicable skills and real-world experience (internships, practical projects) rather than just course completion.
  • Understand the market you’re entering: in some fields, degrees will still matter a lot; in others, skills may dominate.

For employers/hiring managers:

  • Shift the mindset from “degree = quality” to “skills + potential = quality”. Consider frameworks that map candidate capabilities rather than credentials alone.
  • Invest in internal upskilling and mobility: if someone has half the skills, can you train them to fill the gap rather than starting anew?
  • Be transparent about what skills you value: publish job specifications that list required competencies (technical/soft) rather than just degree requirements.
  • Rethink filters: degrees can exclude valuable talent unnecessarily; opening to skills-based hiring can widen the pool and improve diversity.

Looking Ahead: What The Future Holds

  • The concept of a “resume” will increasingly emphasise skills, microcredentials, project portfolios and demonstrated outcomes rather than the diploma line.
  • For employers: talent frameworks will evolve to map skills inventories, learning pathways and internal mobility, not just external hiring of degree holders.
  • For learners: the era of one degree for life will give way to lifelong learning for multiple careers. Reskilling and up-skilling will become the norm (not the exception).
  • For institutions: education providers will need to become more agile, modular, aligned with industry, and flexible (online + offline + mentored).
  • For economies: if more roles can be filled via skills-based sourcing, the potential for reducing mismatch, unemployment and under-employment rises, opening opportunities for talent from non-traditional backgrounds.

The message is clear: in the evolving world of work, skills are fast becoming the currency. Degrees are no longer the sole or even dominant credential in many cases; they remain relevant, but increasingly as part of a broader stack that includes practical capabilities, learning agility, adaptability, and demonstrated performance.

For jobseekers, the takeaway is: don’t just get a degree, build relevant skills, and be ready to show what you can do. For employers, it’s a call to rethink hiring, talent development and internal mobility through a skills lens. For educators and policymakers, it’s a prompt to recalibrate curricula, credentials and pathways in service of the real demands of the labour market.

(The author is the Director & Co-founder of iXceed Solutions)

Disclaimer: The opinions, beliefs, and views expressed by the various authors and forum participants on this website are personal and do not reflect the opinions, beliefs, and views of ABP Network Pvt. Ltd.

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