How Qualifications Can Improve Your Job Options
This article is part of the Training and Qualifications guide.
Qualifications change your position in the labour market. The right ones — gained at the right stage of your career — open doors that experience alone cannot, increase your negotiating leverage and reduce your exposure to the risks of skills-short market volatility.
Three ways qualifications improve your options
They open gated roles. Many roles in skilled sectors have qualification requirements that are genuine gatekeepers — you cannot get the interview without them. NEBOSH for health and safety management, IOSH for supervisory roles, City and Guilds for specific technical disciplines. Without these, a proportion of the market is simply inaccessible.
They increase salary leverage. A qualified candidate in a skills-short market is more valuable than an unqualified one with equivalent experience. The qualification provides objective evidence of capability and signals commitment — both of which translate into stronger salary positions.
They reduce employment risk. Qualified workers are harder to replace and more expensive to lose. In a redundancy situation, the qualified worker is typically the last to go. In a restructure, they are more likely to be redeployed. Qualifications are a form of employment insurance.
How to choose strategically
Pursue qualifications that are:
- Genuinely required (not just preferred) for the roles you want
- Recognised by multiple employers, not just your current one
- Achievable within a realistic timeframe alongside your work commitments
- Available through employer funding if you ask for it