Ursula Fear Archives - 麻豆原创 Africa News Center News & Information About 麻豆原创 Fri, 27 Jun 2025 06:43:03 +0000 en-ZA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Africa has an AI Skills Problem that is Forcing a Youth Empowerment Rethink /africa/2025/06/africa-has-an-ai-skills-problem-that-is-forcing-a-youth-empowerment-rethink/ Fri, 27 Jun 2025 06:43:03 +0000 /africa/?p=148236 AI is evolving from generative tools to autonomous agents, now African businesses face skills shortages as the tech giants shift focus from traditional coding bootcamps...

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AI is evolving from generative tools to autonomous agents, now African businesses face skills shortages as the tech giants shift focus from traditional coding bootcamps to 鈥楢I readiness鈥 鈥 but are we preparing our youth for the right future?

There was a nightmare scenario revealed in 麻豆原创鈥檚 latest听: the technology goalposts have shifted, once again, leaving the continent caught between digital transformation ambitions and the harsh reality of skills shortages that are already undermining business operations.

鈥淎 hundred percent of the African organisations that we surveyed said that they saw an increase in demand for AI skills in 2025, and just around 50% of that said they saw a significant increase in the demand for those AI skills,鈥 explains , interim managing director for Southern Africa at 麻豆原创.

The impact isn鈥檛 theoretical 鈥 it鈥檚 immediate and painful. Nearly 90% of survey responses report that AI skills shortages are already causing 鈥渄elays in implementations, failed innovation initiatives, an inability to take on new work, and loss of clients.鈥

For South African companies, the situation is particularly worrying 鈥 98% say lacking AI skills undermines their innovation capabilities, making them more vulnerable to competitive disadvantage.

The agentic age changes everything

But even as organisations scramble to address these shortages, the AI landscape is rapidly shifting beyond the generative AI tools that dominated 2023 and 2024 keynotes, toward 鈥渁gentic AI鈥 鈥 autonomous systems that can plan, act, and adapt independently.

鈥淐opilot was like version one of AI for enterprises with the generative stuff it鈥檚 moved beyond, so you鈥檒l see everyone talks about agents 鈥 and the secret of agents is that it鈥檚 autonomous,鈥 explains Robin Fisher, head of EMEA growth markets at Salesforce, describing how these systems represent a fundamental departure from reactive AI tools toward proactive, goal-directed agents.

This shift is forcing a complete rethink of what 鈥淎I readiness skills鈥 even are. The traditional focus on coding 鈥 the bread and butter of coding academies across Africa that spawned under the weight of the last future-focused skills wave 鈥 is giving way to something far more nuanced.

Ursula Fear, Salesforce鈥檚 senior talent programme manager, warns that 鈥39% of all of our core skills, the global workforce core skills, are to be changed by 2030鈥. She now says we should all be 鈥渓ifelong learners鈥, dedicating 鈥渁 minimum of about 10 hours a week鈥 to staying relevant.

The skills that matter now extend far beyond 鈥渙nes and zeros鈥 coding. Fisher suggests that future AI readiness includes 鈥渢he ability to maybe even go back to some of those things like psychology or linguistics because it鈥檚 around making agents human鈥 鈥 skills crucial for ensuring AI agents operate with empathy and effective communication.

The new rules of AI readiness

This evolution is reshaping how major tech companies approach youth empowerment in Africa. Both Salesforce and its upstart Indian competitor Zoho are moving away from partnerships with coding bootcamps toward more holistic AI readiness programmes.

Salesforce has launched rural interventions, including a pilot partnership with Absa in what Fear describes as a 鈥渢ier three town鈥 (she鈥檚 talking about Dundee), where they discovered qualified individuals 鈥 including computer science graduates and marine biologists 鈥 who had returned home due to a lack of urban job opportunities. The goal is building 鈥渄igital hubs in tier three towns鈥 that can scale Salesforce solutions to businesses as small as a local 鈥渕eat producer鈥.

鈥淲e 100% believe that the only way that we are going to be able to solve this problem is through collaboration,鈥 Fear continues, describing partnerships with workforce development organisations like Collective X that focus on 鈥渨ork-integrated learning 鈥 the application of it鈥 rather than just certifications.

Zoho, meanwhile, is implementing what it calls 鈥渢ransnational localism鈥 鈥 a philosophy that blends global reach with local engagement. The company is still riding the learn to code rollercoaster with Code Intelligence in Khayelitsha and Bench Bites for 鈥渢rain the trainer programmes,鈥 bringing students to their Cape Town offices and hiring directly from these programmes.

But even the low-cost CRM hero acknowledges the fundamental shift under way. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to not hire any more developers鈥 internally, explains Hyther Nizam, president of Zoho Middle East and Africa, instead aiming to 鈥渞epurpose them to some other things鈥 while equipping existing developers with AI tools like copilots.

Wake-up call for the African dream

For South Africa specifically, these shifts come against a backdrop of sobering economic realities. With youth unemployment at 62%, Andrew Bourne, regional manager for Zoho Southern Africa, stresses the critical need for young South Africans to 鈥渢hink global鈥 because 鈥渨e actually won鈥檛 have enough jobs in South Africa for the unemployed鈥.

This global perspective is reflected in Zoho鈥檚 pricing strategy, which is basically offering 鈥渇irst world technology at a third world price鈥 with 25% subsidised pricing for the rand, maintained consistently for five years.

Their new听, designed for solopreneurs at R99 a month, aims to build 鈥渄igital skills literacy鈥 among one-person businesses.

The challenge isn鈥檛 just about individual skills development, it鈥檚 about systemic change. Despite 94% of African organisations now offering IT training monthly (up from 74% previously), budget allocation for training has actually decreased from 14% to 7% of IT and HR budgets, with no organisation spending more than 10%.

鈥淲e need to allocate a budget for upskilling our existing workforce,鈥 Pillay insists, warning organisations to 鈥減repare for an AI-related skills gap in 2025鈥 and 鈥渦nderstand the impact that a lack of skills will have on your business, your employees, and your customers.鈥

What South Africa鈥檚 AI skills crunch means for you

If you鈥檙e a young job seeker, a business owner, or just trying to future-proof your career, this isn鈥檛 some distant tech debate; it鈥檚 your next paycheque.

AI isn鈥檛 optional any more.听Whether you鈥檙e in finance, farming, or fashion, businesses are under pressure to adopt AI, but there鈥檚 a huge shortage of local talent.

Your CV needs more than just coding.听AI readiness is about more than programming. Skills in communication, business strategy, ethics, and even psychology are now just as valuable.

Training is free, if you know where to look.听Companies like Salesforce and Zoho are offering open-access training, internships, and rural digital hubs.

Jobs aren鈥檛 disappearing, they鈥檙e shifting.听Data entry might be automated, but someone still needs to guide the agents. AI is a tool, not a takeover. The more you understand it, the more irreplaceable you become.

Think beyond our borders.听With SA鈥檚 youth unemployment pushing 60%, the real opportunity might be global. Local startups and students are already getting remote gigs with international firms. The internet doesn鈥檛 care about your postcode.

Bottom line:听If you wait for government policy to catch up, you鈥檒l be left behind. Start skilling up now; even ten hours a week can change your trajectory.

Disproving the replacement theory

Both CRM companies are quick to reject the narrative that AI will simply replace human workers, even though they鈥檙e selling agentic AI.

鈥淎t no point is it creating unemployment,鈥 Fisher argues. 鈥淚n the same way, agents are going to make certain things probably redundant, data capture, data analysis, those jobs will grow, right? Because AI can do the data analysis, but then it鈥檚 going to create new jobs that are more powerful because you have context.鈥

Nizam says Zoho鈥檚 internal experience suggests a more measured reality: AI provides 鈥30% to 40%鈥 productivity improvement, not the 鈥5x to 10x鈥 often promised, partly because 鈥渞eading the AI-generated code is a nightmare.鈥

The reality is that the stakes couldn鈥檛 be higher 鈥 60% of African organisations view AI skills as critical to their success, but 100% expect to face skills gaps. The companies getting it right are those recognising that in an agentic AI world, the most valuable skill might not be writing code, but understanding how to make machines work better with humans.听DM

This article first appeared in the .

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