Updates, insights and articles from the IoC Skills Bootcamps programme.
20 March 2026
The construction industry is undergoing a fundamental shift as sustainability targets, rising energy costs and stricter building regulations converge to reshape how structures are designed, built and retrofitted. Across Europe, governments are backing this transition with significant investment. In the Netherlands, for example, subsidy schemes such as the Dutch ISDE programme for energy-efficient glazing illustrate the scale of public funding directed at improving the energy performance of existing buildings.
In the United Kingdom, the picture is similar. The built environment accounts for a substantial share of national energy consumption and carbon emissions, making it a priority sector for the country's net-zero strategy.
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11 December 2025
As digital transformation reshapes industries across the UK, employers are rethinking how they identify and recruit technology talent. Traditional hiring criteria, centred on formal degrees and years of industry experience, are giving way to a more practical, skills-based approach. Industry body techUK has highlighted the growing importance of closing the digital skills gap through diverse training pathways, including intensive bootcamp programmes that produce job-ready candidates in a matter of weeks rather than years.
For organisations partnering with the IoC Skills Bootcamps programme, the appeal of bootcamp graduates lies not only in their technical abilities but in the broader qualities they bring to the workplace. Hiring managers consistently report that the most successful bootcamp graduates combine practical competence with personal attributes that are difficult to teach in a classroom.
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23 October 2025
When people think of universities, they tend to think of three-year degree programmes, lecture halls and student campuses. Yet the contribution that higher education institutions make to workforce development extends far beyond traditional academic courses. Across the UK, universities are increasingly engaged in the delivery of short, intensive training programmes that respond directly to the needs of employers and the wider economy.
The Institute of Coding consortium demonstrates this model in action. Led by the University of Bath and comprising 13 university partners, the IoC has delivered Skills Bootcamps that combine academic rigour with practical, employment-focused outcomes.
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16 October 2024
The technology sector is one of the UK's most dynamic and fastest growing areas of employment, yet many people who might thrive in digital roles never explore the possibility because they assume a career in tech requires a computer science degree or years of prior experience. In reality, the pathways into technology have broadened considerably. Research published by the Department for Education highlights that the supply of specialist graduates alone cannot meet the growing demand for digital skills, making reskilling and upskilling routes essential to closing the gap.
Skills Bootcamps were created specifically to serve this need. Designed for adults who want to gain practical, employable skills in a short timeframe, these programmes provide an intensive but accessible route into technology for people at all stages of their careers, including those with no prior technical background.
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12 September 2024
Cybersecurity has become one of the most critical areas of concern for organisations across the United Kingdom. As cyber threats grow in volume and sophistication, the demand for qualified security professionals has surged. Yet the supply of skilled workers has not kept pace, leaving businesses of all sizes exposed to risks that range from data breaches to full-scale operational disruption.
The shortage is particularly acute because cybersecurity requires a combination of technical expertise, analytical thinking and the ability to respond rapidly to evolving threats.
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9 September 2024
The digital skills gap in the United Kingdom is no longer a future concern; it is a present reality with measurable economic consequences. According to a House of Commons Library research briefing, the shortage of digital capabilities among the workforce costs the UK economy an estimated 63 billion pounds per year in lost productivity. As industries across every sector become increasingly dependent on digital tools and processes, the need for a workforce equipped with relevant technical competencies has never been more urgent.
At the heart of the problem lies a mismatch between the skills employers require and the skills available in the labour market.
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