Home » HR practices » Professional development » France: Sanofi focusing on the ‘training experience’ to accelerate upskilling and reskilling France: Sanofi focusing on the ‘training experience’ to accelerate upskilling and reskilling After having identified the jobs that are in high demand and those that are likely to be significantly altered or to even disappear, the French multinational pharmaceutical and healthcare group now wants to strengthen its training provision, by placing specific emphasis on digital transformation and biotechnology innovation. To achieve this, the company is focusing on the ‘training experience’ and is providing staff training opportunities via virtual reality, gamification, and an integrated platform. By Antoine Piel. Published on 01 March 2023 à 9h32 - Update on 01 March 2023 à 8h47 Resources In 2022, Sanofi signed two training agreements for its 20,000 employees in France (90,000 employees worldwide). One of them, an agreement on managing jobs and career paths, which runs until 2025, distinguished between sensitive jobs and jobs under pressure (in demand). This classification has since been explained to every employee of the Group during the course of their careers meetings. While Sanofi is focusing its recruitment energies on meeting the high demand jobs the group is also prioritising appropriate internal training provision to be able to fill these vacancies in the bio-technology innovation and digital transformation areas (data science,… Antoine Piel Need more info ? Contact mind's on-demand study service Which service do you want to contact :WritingCommercial serviceTechnical SupportFirst nameLast nameOrganizationFunctionemail* Object of the messageYour messageRGPD J’accepte la politique de confidentialité.FacebookThis field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. Essentials Latest articles Longer careers: a new state of affairs for companies CSRD: social and environmental reporting market takes shape Analysis & Data Latest articles Paternity leave: data observations from 41 countries EU: during H1 2022 five EU Member States have raised their minimum salary levels