We’ve been talking a lot about skills lately, and one thing has become clear: there’s often a lot of confusion around what constitutes a task, a skill, a competency or a capability.
We want to clear the matter up once and for all, so let’s get straight into it!
Four similar concepts, four different meanings! What are the key differences between these important concepts, and where might you spot them in the workplace?
Level |
Definition |
Traditional evidence |
Example |
Task |
Single, observable unit of work with a clear start and finish |
Checklists, SOP tick offs |
Update work document |
Hard skill |
Learned ability to execute a task to a defined standard |
Skills tests, certificates |
Operational data analysis |
Soft skill |
Non-technical skill rooted in social/self management behaviours |
360° feedback, scenario-based roleplays |
Conflict management |
Competency |
Bundle of skills + knowledge + behaviours, calibrated to role performance |
Behavioural rubrics, KPIs |
End-to-end process optimisation |
Capability |
Enduring, scalable organisational ability that delivers strategic outcomes |
Balanced scorecard, OKRs |
Customer responsive operations |
There’s a big difference between completing a task (a day-to-day activity) and mastering a capability (a large-scale, strategic organisational ability) in terms of effort, skills and knowledge required and the impact on the business.
But it’s also about what you get back from each of them! For instance, while a task should be relatively quick to complete, the ROI will likely be fairly low, while mastering a capability is a much bigger investment of time, effort and money, with much larger potential ROI.
Here’s what that looks like at each level:
Level |
Typical investment |
Pay-off mechanism |
Example metrics to track |
Typical ROI time scales |
Task automation and tooling |
Job aids, SOP redesign (£) |
Fewer errors and rework |
Defect rate, cycle time |
Weeks |
Skills training |
Course fees, coaching time (££) |
Faster, better task execution |
Time to proficiency, productivity uplift |
3-6 months |
Competency development |
Skills training plus mentoring, stretch projects (££–£££) |
Higher role performance across varied scenarios |
Quality, throughput, customer satisfaction |
6-12 months |
Capability build |
Organisation-wide processes, tech stacks, culture change (££££) |
New revenue, risk mitigation, strategic agility |
Market share, time-to-market |
1-3 years |
You may have spotted that we’re preparing to launch our brand-new AI skills intelligence solution in the coming weeks. We’re confident that this will help learning and talent leaders finally understand what the skills in their businesses really look like, including where they’re showing up, who has them and what skills gaps need to be filled. This is backed by conversations with dozens of L&D professionals, all of whom have shared how difficult it is to track skills growth across the organisation.
On top of this enhanced visibility and understanding of skills, including how they contribute to competencies and capabilities, this will also give a better insight into the ROI of your efforts. For example, what’s the real impact of your skills training and coaching? Has it helped boost productivity through better-skilled employees? Has it cut costs on correcting mistakes? Has it accelerated time to market? AI skills intelligence helps you dig deeper into your skills data so you know for sure how your learning initiatives are helping.
We have the potential to allow organisations to easily report on ROI within L&D, that being not only how this new concept can lead to cost savings but also how effective any resulting, or existing, learning interventions are. By tracking how skills manifest in day-to-day work, and correlating those shifts with business outcomes, organisations gain clear, quantifiable proof of training effectiveness.
Our new AI skills intelligence solution brings with it five key benefits to help learning teams, talent professionals and senior business leaders understand the real impact of the skills, competencies and capabilities in play across the organisation.