As India’s financial sector undergoes rapid transformation driven by technology, automation, and new regulations, the Banking, Financial Services, and Insurance (BFSI) sector continues to create diverse opportunities for skilled professionals. This evolution has made skill-based education and industry-academia collaboration more crucial than ever.
In today’s fast-changing ecosystem, employability depends not just on degrees but on relevant, practical, and tech-enabled learning. The demand for regulatory compliance, data literacy, and digital competence is reshaping job roles across the financial sector; from fintech and risk management to analytics and investment operations.
To explore this, Dr. Madhuri Dubey, Founder and Director of National Skills Network -NSN, spoke with Mr. Ambarish Datta, Founder and CEO of Talent Skillsvarsity; a pioneer in skill-based education for the BFSI domain. The conversation focused on bridging skill gaps, aligning education with industry needs, and preparing the next generation of professionals for a digital, data-driven BFSI sector.
Below are a few excerpts from our conversation. You can watch the full video on our YouTube channel.
Q. What makes skill-based education essential for addressing the emerging needs and skill gaps in the BFSI sector today?
A. The BFSI sector is one of India’s largest employment generators, closely aligned with the government’s financial inclusion agenda. It employs nearly 80 million people, including banking professionals, insurance agents, fintech experts, and those in capital markets and NBFCs; forming a vast and interconnected ecosystem.
What makes BFSI unique is its dual nature: it’s both heavily regulated and deeply technology-driven. Many roles require mandatory certifications from bodies like SEBI or IRDAI, ensuring compliance and accountability. At the same time, automation, cybersecurity, and data-driven processes have transformed operations, making regulatory knowledge and technical skills equally essential.
This constant evolution demands professionals who are not only trained and certified but also agile enough to adapt to rapid changes in technology and compliance requirements.
Q. What types of skill-based and employment-oriented programs does Talent Skillsvarsity offer to address the diverse needs of the BFSI sector?
A. At Talent Skillsvarsity, we focus on seven core domains within the BFSI ecosystem; banking and finance, capital markets, fintech, data science, securities law, and financial journalism. Each domain is designed to address specific industry needs and emerging opportunities.
Our skilling model operates in two key formats. The first focuses on short-term, job-specific programs that help students transition from college to career. These are targeted at undergraduates, particularly in their second or third year, and combine practical training with mandatory regulatory certifications, ensuring students are employable from day one.
The second format includes long-duration vocational or degree-integrated programs that allow students to study alongside their college curriculum. By the time they graduate, they possess both a degree and the essential industry certifications, reducing the learning curve for employers and making recruitment more efficient.
In addition, we collaborate with the industry to design specialized undergraduate and postgraduate programs that bridge identified skill gaps. For example, traditional finance roles now demand data analytics and technology integration, so we have developed blended courses in Finance and Data Analytics, aligned with NEP 2020’s flexible framework.
Our ultimate goal is to function as a talent supply chain for the BFSI industry; continuously mapping industry requirements, updating curricula, and ensuring students graduate with relevant, future-ready skills rather than outdated knowledge.
Q. How can universities and colleges collaborate with Talent Skillsvarsity to design and deliver industry-aligned, skill-based programs under the NEP framework?
A. Yes, we actively collaborate with both universities and colleges to design industry-aligned, skill-integrated programs. Traditionally, higher education institutions have been highly structured and operated within rigid regulatory frameworks, which made it difficult to adopt flexible, industry-driven models. However, with the introduction of NEP 2020, this is changing rapidly.
Today, universities recognize the need to update curricula to stay relevant and competitive, especially with growing pressure from global and private institutions. We work closely with them to bridge the gap between academia and industry, bringing in real-time insights on emerging job roles and evolving skill needs.
The key lies in maintaining a balance between academic fundamentals and practical, skill-based learning. Our teams collaborate with university Boards of Studies to co-create curricula that fit within the credit-based system, ensuring regulatory compliance while adding clear employability outcomes.
We also provide value-added support such as program delivery, faculty assistance, and student placements, which strengthen institutional performance in areas like NAAC accreditation and NIRF ranking.

While we align our programs conceptually with NSQF, full integration is complex due to differences between NSQF hours and university credit structures. Hence, instead of using predefined NSQF modules, we develop customized occupational standards that align closely with current industry requirements; ensuring that programs remain agile, relevant, and future-ready.
Q. How can educational institutions effectively align with industry needs and build sustainable, long-term collaborations in the BFSI sector?
A. Building and sustaining meaningful industry alignment is not easy, especially in the absence of a formal labour market information system in India. For effective collaboration, educational and training institutions must understand four essential aspects from industry partners; what skills are needed, where the demand exists, when the hiring happens, and at what cost.
Without this clarity, skill training can become misaligned; for instance, training students in one region for jobs that primarily exist elsewhere. In contrast, countries with structured labour market surveys have a data-backed approach to workforce planning, whereas in India, this intelligence must often be gathered through professional networks and ongoing engagement.
Additionally, because the BFSI sector is constantly evolving through automation and digital transformation, job roles can quickly become obsolete. Hence, institutions must maintain a continuous feedback loop with industry to track changing roles and skill requirements. This enables both reskilling of existing professionals and upskilling of new entrants for emerging opportunities.
Ultimately, sustainable alignment depends on being just-in-time and job-specific; ensuring that skilling efforts directly correspond to where and when the industry needs talent, thereby improving employability outcomes and workforce readiness.
Q.What advice would you give to young people aspiring to build successful and rewarding careers in the BFSI sector?
A. This is one of the best times in history to begin a career in India, particularly for those entering the financial and technology-driven sectors. Over the next few decades, we’ll witness profound transformation; shorter career cycles, evolving industries, and new job roles shaped by technology and innovation. For young professionals, this period presents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. Those who invest in relevant, future-ready skills and stay aware of emerging trends will thrive. The workplace of tomorrow will reward agility, curiosity, and the ability to adapt quickly to change. If you’re skilled, open to learning, and proactive in pursuing opportunities, it will be very hard to fail in this environment.











