It’s the advantage of comparing apples to apples. Using Lightcast skills allows you compare your data against the entire labor market, as seen through our massive database of postings, resumes, and profiles. We also do the tidying up: our dedicated team removes duplicates and corrects misspellings so you don’t have to.
If you’re not already using one, odds are that someone at your organization is. Everyone needs to start with skills when approaching the job market, whether that’s in designing curricula, planning development, or keeping up with workforce capabilities (“How many people on our sales team are Salesforce Trailhead certified?”). Sometimes, different departments have their own specialized libraries—using just one across an entire organization reduces miscommunication and maximizes efficiency.
Most skills come with a descriptive definition. All skills in our library reflect their current common usage, and we include a Wikipedia link to help with that definition wherever possible, distributed under the CC BY-SA license.
In addition to grouping skills by similarity, we also sort them according to three classifications:
Common Skills are prevalent across many different occupations and industries, including both personal attributes and learned skills. (e.g. "Communication" or "Microsoft Excel"). These include soft skills, human skills, and general competencies.
Specialized Skills are more specific They’re primarily required within a subset of occupations or equip one to perform a specific task (like "NumPy" or "Hotel Management"). These are sometimes known as technical skills or hard skills.
Certifications are recognizable qualification standards assigned by industry or education bodies (including “Cosmetology License” or “Certified Cytotechnologist”).
Monthly; each release contains new skills and updates to how existing skills are identified. You can visit the changelog to see what each update looks like.
We select skills that we know are relevant to people, employers, and educators—meaning, they are commonly listed on real-world resumes, professional profiles, and job postings. We gather and analyze millions of these skills each month and also take suggestions from the community. You can suggest a skill.
Using an API as opposed to a downloadable list gives you access to the most up-to-date dataset, while a static downloadable list would be out of date very soon—skills are constantly changing (and our library is updated monthly).
We believe that a common language is the best way forward for the whole system for people, education providers, and employers. Our hope is that by making this library freely available, we can help jobseekers identify the skills they need to get the job they want, help employers save time and money finding skilled candidates, and help educators provide relevant and specific courses.
Top-down, highly structural approaches like O*NET are useful for seeing long-term trends, but difficult to maintain and keep relevant as the world of work keeps changing. The Lightcast library is faster and more agile.
The Lightcast Open Skills Library is free for individual and not-for-profit use, as long as you attribute Lightcast and abide by our policies. Here are the Terms and Conditions.