The shared services industry has reached a pivotal moment. As organizations accelerate digital transformation and navigate skills shortages, the capability and identity of the shared services workforce have become central to organizational resilience and service excellence. Across the sector, a consistent theme emerges: shared services professionals want clearer pathways, stronger recognition, and a more visible professional identity.
This is not simply a workforce development issue. It is a strategic imperative.
Shared services is evolving rapidly, moving from Industry 5.0's human-technology collaboration toward the early contours of Industry 6.0 – where hyper‑automation, AI orchestration, and human judgement coexist. In this environment, capability uplift and human expertise become foundational to shared services' competitive advantage.
Despite its value, shared services can suffer from a PR problem. The work is often misunderstood as transactional or rigid, shaped by perceptions of impersonal, automated services with limited strategic value. In reality, shared services are a highly complex, technology‑enabled, people‑centered ecosystem. It sits at the forefront of human-centric design, AI adoption, automation, data analytics, and integrated service delivery. The opportunity is to build capability pathways that reflect this reality and elevate the profession accordingly.
Why Capability Uplift Matters in Shared Services
Across the sector, shared services professionals consistently tell us that they want:
- Recognition of shared services as a profession, not just an operational function
- Qualification pathways, accredited learning, and structured development that signal legitimacy and expertise.
- Stakeholders who understand the complexity, judgment, and the technical capability required
- Visibility of the high‑value skillsets they bring, skills that increasingly see them headhunted into roles outside shared services.
- A future for themselves, not just a job
Shared services success has moved well beyond cost efficiency, with maturity now defined by capability, leadership, continuous improvement, organizational resilience, and sustainability. The function sits at the forefront of human-technology co-creation, developing advanced digital skills, analytical capabilities, and cross-functional collaboration as automation and AI reshape work. Industry insights reinforce the importance of leadership, change capability, and professionalization in strengthening shared services models.
The Shift from Industry 5.0 to Industry 6.0
Understanding the capability challenge requires understanding the broader industrial context.
Industry 6.0 (emerging)
Industry 6.0 is an emerging stage defined by:
- AI-orchestrated workflows
- Hyper‑automation
- Predictive and prescriptive analytics
- Human oversight and interaction with autonomous systems
- Ethical, secure, and resilient digital operations
- Governance principles
Shared services is already moving toward this horizon as organizations employ AI-enabled processes, intelligent automation, and data‑driven decision support. Industry 6.0 represents the next evolution of human and machine capability working together in increasingly autonomous, intelligent, and interconnected systems. This shift intensifies the need for structured capability uplift and clear professional pathways.
What Shared Services Professionals are Telling us
Shared services is a profession, and people want it recognized as such
Employees want to be seen as experts, not support staff. They want recognition of process complexity, the judgment required, the integration of technology and people, and the strategic impact of service quality.
They want structured, visible qualification pathways
This includes accredited learning, micro‑credentials, professional certifications, clear role families, progression routes, and opportunities to specialize or broaden capability.
They want stakeholders to understand the real work of shared services
The PR problem is real. When stakeholders understand the complexity of data integrity, compliance, automation oversight, customer experience, and risk management, respect increases, engagement improves, and career pathways become more visible.
Shared Services Skills Framework: The Capabilities That Matter Most
Drawing on SSON data, sector trends, and the literature, the capability landscape now spans four domains.
Technical and Digital Capability
- AI literacy
- Automation oversight
- Data analytics
- Process Optimization
- System Fluency
- Cybersecurity awareness
Digital fluency is now a clear differentiator, shaping how effectively teams adopt new tools, integrate automation, and operate in digital environments.
Human and Leadership Capability
- Psychological safety
- Coaching
- Communication
- Change leadership
- Stakeholder management
This domain includes the leadership behaviors that create safe, fair, and supportive work environments. As organizations adopt more automation and AI, leadership capability becomes essential for maintaining trust, supporting well-being, and ensuring responsible work design. Human‑centered leadership sits at the core of this capability: caring workplace practices that provide clear career pathways, fair and equitable conditions, and ongoing investment in development.
Professional and Operational Capability
- Process excellence
- Quality management
- Governance
- Risk and compliance
- Customer experience
- Continuous improvement
Good governance supports ethical, transparent, and safe operations. It also underpins healthy work environments, including the conditions required for psychological safety, fair workload distribution, and responsible AI use.
Strategic and Adaptive Capability
- Problem solving
- Critical thinking
- Innovation
- Systems thinking
- Cross‑functional collaboration
These capabilities reflect the shift from transactional processing to strategic, knowledge‑intensive, technology‑enabled service delivery.
Building Career Pathways That Attract, Grow, and Retain Talent
Career pathways aid recruitment and retention. In shared services, they must be visible, structured, future‑focused, aligned to capability frameworks, and supported by leaders. Practical actions include mapping role families and progression routes, creating specialist and generalist pathways, building learn‑to‑earn models, designing rotational programs, and partnering with education providers for accredited pathways.
Elevating Shared Services as a Profession
To strengthen professional identity and stakeholder recognition, shared services leaders can:
- Communicate the complexity and strategic value of shared services
- Share data on performance and impact
- Highlight the integration of human expertise, AI, and automation
- Position shared services as a Center of Excellence (CoE)
- Build internal narratives that celebrate capability, not just efficiency
When stakeholders understand the real work, respect follows – and investment follows with it.
Capability Uplift as a Strategic Advantage
Shared services is a strategic, technology‑enabled, people‑centered profession that underpins organizational performance. As the sector moves forward, capability uplift becomes a competitive advantage, shaping service quality, employee engagement, and organizational resilience.
Organizations thrive when they invest in professional identity, structured pathways, and future‑focused capability development.