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Half of India’s workforce left unskilled in FY24-25: upGrad Enterprise Report

• By Jagriti Kumari
Half of India’s workforce left unskilled in FY24-25: upGrad Enterprise Report

Despite widespread acknowledgment of upskilling as a business priority, 50% of India’s workforce remained untrained in FY2024-25, according to the latest upGrad Enterprise Report. The report also revealed that 75% of employees engaged in learning only when mandated, indicating a pressing need to move beyond checkbox training.

The findings are based on insights from over 12,300 professionals across sectors, and point to a deep disconnect between employee expectations and current corporate training models. Notably, nearly half of Indian workplaces lack formal skilling strategies, leading to inconsistent access and widening capability gaps.

“There’s a serious skilling gap emerging. We see companies budgeting annually, but very little actual skilling is happening. The pace of technology is outstripping organisational readiness, and we are not prepared for the ripple effects,” said Srikanth Iyengar, CEO, upGrad Enterprise.

“In a multigenerational workforce, skilling — especially AI-focused and embedded with soft skills — must adapt to the learner’s needs, not the other way around.”

Key Findings:

Mandates outweigh motivation:

Mismatch in priorities:

Generational divide in skilling preferences:

Yet, 63% of HR leaders do not tailor skilling programs by generation.

Skilling design vs learner preference:

Format fatigue

Low investment, low ROI

“Without personalised, real-time, and career-aligned learning, training becomes a checkbox activity — ineffective at best, costly at worst,” added Iyengar.

“Our decade-long experience enables us to design adaptive learning journeys that align individual aspirations with business goals, ensuring skills are not just acquired but applied meaningfully.”

The report sends a strong message to India Inc.: in a rapidly evolving digital economy, skilling must be personalised, continuous, and aligned to both organisational and individual growth goals. As workforce expectations shift, especially across generations, companies must invest not just in content—but in context, relevance, and learner experience.