About Us
Carnegie Mellon University has built a virtual "Workforce Supply Chains" tool that can rapidly quantify
the readiness of a regional workforce to meet labor demand for a specific occupation or set of skills.
It can be used to:
- design training programs that focus on the most salient missing skills
- to support data-driven workforce development plans for industrial capacity investment programs
- and to evaluate how technology might close labor market gaps by augmenting worker skills
For any US metropolitan statistical area, the tool estimates the gap between skill supply and demand.
Learn MoreTeam
The team developing this tool includes:
Ramayya Krishnan
Dean, Heinz College Of Information Systems And Public Policy, CMUChristophe Combemale
Research LeadElizaveta Gonchar
Analytics LeadMichael Affare
Technical LeadVatsal Sheth
Research AssistantFrequently Asked Questions
Some frequently asked questions are listed below
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How can we learn more about the methodology used for this analysis?
Documentation, papers on the methodology used will be linked here.
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What if the job I am interested in is not listed in SOC codes?
There is development ongoing to allow for custom jobs to be described and uploaded for analysis (still in development).
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What data informs this analysis?
ACS, BLS data.
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Do the survival curves mean how much labour is available to me?
There are several factors that influence the willingness of a person to transfer jobs. This research is focusing on wages and skill transferrability as a starting point.
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How can I get access to this tool?
Contact the team for discussions on your specific use case.