It all starts at school.
A whole year of learning, studying and revising all boils down to a single exam.
Some people find exams a breeze. They’re great under pressure and can easily cram everything into their brains for a couple of hours.
Some people find it a huge struggle. There’s too much riding on a single assessment, and they underperform, even if they fully understand the subject matter.
We know that there are some major limitations of one-off assessments… so why do we still rely on them in the workplace? Below, we’ll explore why your performance management programme could be suffering if you’re pinning everything on single quizzes or assessments.
Let’s cut to the chase: annual skills assessments just aren’t good enough in 2025.
Annual skills assessments haven’t kept pace with the speed of change in today’s workplaces. We’re developing new skills every month to keep up with new tools and technologies, often learning in the flow of work to stay afloat. If you last tested someone’s skills last September and you won’t be testing them again until this September, that’s a whole lot of progress you’re missing out on in between. By the time results are analysed and acted upon, they may well already be obsolete.
Another issue with annual skills assessments is that they tend to be top-down and generic, rather than continuous, contextual and tailored to the skills and experience of each employee. If someone with 20+ years of experience has to take the same assessment as someone new to the workforce, it’s a recipe for disengagement and box-ticking.
Modern, forward-thinking organisations need more agile, ongoing approaches to skills assessment that go beyond ‘What skills did you have at this specific moment in time?’ and towards asking ‘How are your skills showing up at work every day? And are those skills improving over time?’.
Continuous skills assessment is an ongoing, dynamic approach to tracking and accelerating skills development. Instead of a basic yearly assessment, continuous skills assessment allows us to track skills development in real time.
It’s embedded into day-to-day work, meaning managers and the L&D team can keep an eye on progress, which skills are actually being used and potential development areas. This makes skills data more relevant, accurate and actionable, and it’s much more reliable than standard self-reported skills assessments. After all, it’s easy to rate yourself 10/10 for your coaching skills, but it’s much more useful to see your coaching skills in action, tracked by real data.
Continuous skills assessments are valuable for L&D, managers and your individual employees.
Five of the key benefits of continuous skills assessments are:
When managers and employees engage in real-time performance conversations, everyone wins. Managers are able to more closely monitor progress and suggest useful resources, while employees can reach their own learning goals faster – very handy when they’re pursuing promotions or career development opportunities!
Managers can monitor skills as and when they’re used in the workplace, allowing for more personalised, constructive conversations that are based on the right now, not on a course someone took six months ago. When the skills we need are changing so quickly, it really pays for everyone to have their finger on the pulse.
So what does that look like in practice?
Unless your managers have way too much time on their hands and fancy playing Big Brother, you’ll be relieved to hear that AI can handle the heavy lifting of continuous skills assessments, monitoring and reporting.
AI can sync up with your existing tools and keep track of what skills you’re displaying in the flow of work. There’s no need to set aside time to take a formal assessment – you can simply get on with your normal tasks and find out where you’re excelling and where you can develop.
In fact, we’ll be sharing more details of our very own AI skills intelligence solution very, very soon. Everyone signed up to our exclusive list will hear more first, as well as being invited to help shape our upcoming product. We’d hate for you to miss out, so sign up below to stay in the loop about all things AI skills intelligence!