Skills-Based Hiring with Beth Ardner
Episode Summary
Beth Ardner explains how skills data can improve hiring and mobility. Brian talks with Beth Ardner of Gobekli.io about learning and employment records, credential wallets, and the challenge of making real skills visible beyond degrees, job titles, and resumes. Beth shares how her team helps people capture evidence from work, education, caregiving, volunteering, games, and other life experiences, then translate that evidence into language employers can use. The conversation also explores AI, apprenticeships, team alignment, and why better skills visibility can change both hiring and workforce growth.
Key Takeaways
Degrees and job titles are often weak proxies for what a person can actually do.
Skills become more useful when they are connected to evidence from repeated real-world practice.
Employers often ask for broad traits like critical thinking without clearly defining the subskills they need.
Credential wallets and learning and employment records can help people collect structured and unstructured evidence of their abilities.
AI may reduce entry-level tasks, which creates pressure for companies to rethink training and early career development.
Apprenticeships could become more common in fields beyond the trades as organizations look for better ways to build talent.
Better skills visibility can help companies hire, place, and grow people with more accuracy.
Timeline
Opening and Background
00:00 Brian introduces Beth Ardner and the conversation begins.
00:54 Beth shares her path from creative writing to publishing, sales, customer management, business development, and Gobekli.io.
03:20 Beth explains Gobekli.io’s work in the learning and employment records ecosystem.
Skills, Evidence, and Hiring
04:05 Brian and Beth discuss why degrees and resumes do not always show what someone can do.
05:20 Beth explains why employers often use vague skill language, especially around critical thinking.
07:35 Beth describes credential wallets, Talent Pass, and the value of capturing unstructured skills data.
09:00 Brian shares a World of Warcraft leadership example, and Beth explains how experiences like that can become evidence.
Assessment, AI, and Employer Use Cases
12:15 Beth explains how Gobekli.io collects external credentials and uses AI conversations to surface skills evidence.
14:25 Beth discusses the employer side of the business and the Talent Sync tool.
16:10 Brian and Beth talk about team fit, skill alignment, and putting people in the right seats.
18:30 Beth compares Gobekli.io’s approach to tools like DISC and Myers-Briggs.
AI, Apprenticeships, and Workforce Change
20:00 Brian raises the concern that AI may reduce entry-level roles.
21:05 Beth explains why AI is more likely to eliminate entry-level tasks and force companies to redesign training.
24:40 Beth discusses the growing role of apprenticeships, workforce funding, and new models for career development.
Looking Ahead and Contact
27:15 Beth reflects on cultural change, workforce outcomes, and economic mobility.
28:45 Beth shares what she is excited about for 2026, including workforce funding, Talent Pass conversations, and work supporting veterans.
30:35 Beth shares how listeners can connect with her through email, LinkedIn, Gobekli.io, and Talent Pass.
Links and Resources:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/beth-ardner/
Company: https://gobekli.io/