April 19, 2022 by Remie Verougstraete
Emsi Burning Glass has introduced a new occupation taxonomy within the Analyst, Developer, and Talent Analyst platforms. Called the Global Occupation Taxonomy (GOT) because it captures the comprehensive scope of the workforce, it includes specialized occupations that unlock new insight into the skills that drive career mobility and wage growth in today’s economy.
Here’s what you need to know:
The Global Occupation Taxonomy is a proprietary taxonomy composed of four different levels (Career Area, Occupation Group, Occupation, Specialized Occupation). This taxonomy has a 1-1 relationship between levels, meaning each specialized occupation maps to one, and only one, occupation, and so on up the hierarchy. This means you don’t have to worry about duplicate or overlapping data when analyzing job postings for more than one occupation.
The taxonomy allows you to start broad, but then get down to a level of analysis that is far more granular and precise than O*NET and SOC (but without getting as far into the weeds as raw job titles would take you). The GOT is updated at least annually — infrequent enough to make it stable and useful for comparisons over time, but frequent enough to capture new, emerging roles as they formalize in the economy.
The GOT introduces two key benefits for educators, businesses, and community leaders:
Read on for more details about each of these topics, or skip ahead to learn how to begin using the GOT now.
Specialized Occupations represent clusters of job titles and skills that have coalesced into recognizable roles in the labor market. Because they are based on real-time data from postings and profiles, specialized occupations are ideal for capturing emerging jobs like those surrounding data science, blockchain technology, and hybrid roles that blur the lines between traditional occupation categories.
Depending on the country you’re in and the industry you’re analyzing, government taxonomies are often too broad, but sometimes too narrow, to provide useful categories for market research. By contrast, specialized occupations are curated and designed to provide a “just right” level of categorization that perfectly balances aggregation and precision.
To keep pace with the rapidly evolving world of work, these occupations (and the GOT overall) are also reviewed and updated at least annually, making them far more current than government taxonomies that are updated “approximately every decade.”
Altogether, specialized occupations simplify the task of tracking and analyzing real-world job roles in a fast-changing market. They are created and maintained based on three key factors:
The GOT enables us to better analyze the connections and relationships between skills, job titles, and occupations. For example, we will now be able to parse out which skills are necessary, defining, and distinguishing for a particular specialized occupation:
The GOT also allows us to pinpoint skills that are associated with a wage increase or career advancement in a given occupation. This insight is critical for researchers and decision makers across education, government and the private sector — anyone who is looking to uncover and activate pathways to prosperity for students, jobseekers, and employees.
The Global Occupation Taxonomy is currently available as a filter in all Job Postings reports across EBG platforms. Note: Depending on the report, you may need to select the “Show Advanced Options” button in order to access the GOT filter field.
Over the next few weeks, the new taxonomy and related capabilities outlined above will be incorporated into additional reports. If you haven’t already, you can sign up here to receive our newsletter, including major product announcements as they become available.
If you’re a current Emsi Burning Glass customer, please feel free to contact your dedicated account representative with any questions or to learn more about using this taxonomy in your day-to-day work.
If you’re not a current Emsi Burning Class client and would like to learn more about our data, including the new taxonomy, please reach out! We’d love to connect.