Building the Workforce WA Deserves
WA’s skilled labour shortage is more than just a hiring headache — it’s a structural challenge that, if tackled strategically, could lead to long-term resilience and growth. One of the clearest takeaways from our roundtable was that no single solution will suffice. Success will require a mix of collaboration, adaptability, and fresh thinking across government, business, and the recruitment sector.
Yes, migration plays a part, but so does recognising the full spectrum of available talent across industries and alternative employment models. Too often, opportunities are lost because a candidate lacks a narrow type of experience—even when they have highly transferable skills, leadership potential, or the capacity to grow into the role.
In spite of this, we are slowly seeing some shifts in mindset:
- Employers are beginning to think more holistically about workforce planning — investing in capability, not just filling seats.
- Recruiters are stepping up as strategic partners, helping clients navigate a more complex hiring landscape.
- Government initiatives — from housing support to relocation incentives which are designed to help remove key barriers to workforce mobility and participation in WA.
The roundtable left little doubt: WA has the industries, the projects, and the ambition. Now it needs the agility to build flexible workforce models and recognise overlooked talent.
The talent is out there—sometimes it’s overseas, sometimes it’s hidden in adjacent sectors, and sometimes it’s waiting for an opportunity to grow with training. Because building WA’s future workforce isn’t about one perfect unicorn hire – it’s about creating a system that supports the right people, in the right roles, at the right time.