Tech Savvy
Assess your digital fluency and comfort with technology across daily and professional tools
Why It Matters
Digital fluency correlates with 25-35% higher earning potential
Tech comfort is increasingly table-stakes for career advancement
Self-awareness about gaps enables targeted skill development
What You'll Discover
• Your overall digital fluency score
• Your comfort with core productivity tools
• Your ability to learn new software quickly
• Your problem-solving approach with technology
• Specific skills to develop for career advancement
Frequently Asked Questions
What is digital fluency?
Digital fluency is comfort with technology, ability to learn new tools quickly, and willingness to experiment. It goes beyond basic computer use to include troubleshooting, problem-solving with technology, and adapting to digital change.
Is it important for non-tech jobs?
Absolutely. 95% of jobs now require some digital skills. Even retail, healthcare, and manufacturing roles require basic software competence. Digital fluency increasingly separates high-earning from lower-earning workers across all fields.
Can I improve my tech-savviness?
Yes. It improves with exposure and practice. The key is mindset — believing you can learn technology, not avoiding it when it's unfamiliar. Most of digital fluency is confidence and willingness to experiment, not technical genius.
What tools matter most?
Core tools (email, spreadsheets, word processing, video calls, cloud storage) are baseline. Beyond that, industry-specific tools matter: designers need design software, developers need IDEs, marketers need analytics tools. Learning ability matters more than knowing specific tools.
Will AI make digital skills obsolete?
No. As routine tasks automate, higher-level skills become more valuable. You need to understand AI, prompt it effectively, oversee its output, and handle edge cases. Digital fluency is evolving, not disappearing.
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