Quantum computing

The quantum transition – preparing for a quantum ready workforce

Quantum computing is seen as the next wave of innovation in computer technology that promises to offer more powerful and faster computers able to respond to the exponentially exploding challenges.

Should we be preparing for a quantum workforce? Do enough academic institutions offer quantum related undergraduate programmes? How big is the quantum workforce today? Are the jobs there to meet students’ expectations in the field of quantum computing? All these questions and many more were discussed during my recent visit to MIT’s Future Compute gathering last December.

Quantum computing is seen as the next wave of innovation in computer technology that promises to offer more powerful and faster computers able to respond to the exponentially exploding challenges presented by the expansion of such technologies as, Artificial Intelligence, Internet of Things platforms and consumer-facing devices and the growing need to manage complex algorithms and data rapidly and efficiently.


On March 3, 2020, Honeywell, a company known for control systems for planes, homes and businesses announced it had built a quantum computer. Honeywell used trapped ions – charged particles held in place by exact electromagnetic fields – to produce the qubits, whereas Google and IBM use superconducting qubits, which are based on supercooled electrical circuits. No one can deny this race is getting hotter than ever!


Current advances in nanotechnology have helped to bring quantum computing closer to mainstream applications. Quantum computing is an entirely new way of thinking about computation. It is a hardware-based technology that uses qubits (quantum bit) as its basic building block representing a unit of information. Unlike conventional computing that uses the binary representations of 0 or 1 as the state value, quantum computing’s qubits exhibit three state values a 0, 1, and 0 or 1 simultaneously, thereby enabling very complex computational operations to be carried out in these three state values more quickly than would otherwise be possible. An example that underlines the unbelievable speed of quantum is if the very same super complex computation was to be done on a conventional computer, it would take millions of years to calculate.

Quantum computing uses the binary representations of 0 or 1 as the state value, quantum computing’s qubits exhibit three state values a 0, 1, and 0 or 1 simultaneously

According to Professor Will Oliver, the principal investigator in the Engineering Quantum Systems of MIT’s Lincoln Laboratory, there are less than a 1000 people who are primarily operating in quantum computing companies worldwide, and many more are needed to drive expansion in quantum computing applications. But is that expansion actually happening soon? Can real business demand from quantum applications substantiate this aspired growth in quantum engineers and scientists?


In addition to recent announcements by the likes of Google claiming landmark quantum supremacy, according to a report in the Nature journal, other indicators that predict a scale-up in the rate of business in quantum computing is the number of quantum computing start-ups and university spinouts created over the past 5 years, and the level of funding they are attracting from venture capitalists such as DCVC and Prelude, in addition to government grants. James Hardiman, Partner at DCVC said: “small companies like, D-Wave Systems, a Canadian founded quantum computing company, is already delivering practical quantum computing commercial applications globally. However, the scarcity of talent in the quantum field remains to be the biggest challenge for growing this technology space”.

Quantum computing uses the binary representations of 0 or 1 as the state value, quantum computing’s qubits exhibit three state values a 0, 1, and 0 or 1 simultaneously

Blake Johnson, the Lead of IBM’s Quantum Systems

IBM Research, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

However, I have observed the many technology intensive companies that my organisation, the IKE Institute, interact with and it would seem they are playing the ‘wait and see what happens game’ when it comes to quantum computing! Perhaps, they are waiting for the Slope of Enlightenment in the Gartner Hype Cycle to demonstrate and crystalize commercial opportunities.


Whilst the likes of IBM, Google, Microsoft, Hewlett Packard and Alibaba continue to generate more defined quantum computing capabilities, others from the more established firms in the semiconductor industry are also enhancing their manufacturing capabilities and evolving their processes, materials and sensors they use to increase scalability and computational power, whilst reducing energy requirements and production costs. Such dynamics between these camps will define how fast progress can be made. Jim Keller , Senior Vice President of Intel said, “humans psychologically think that technologically the end is near for a constant value of the now”. This is an interesting observation that characterizes the assumption that companies are unable to see the next round of innovations, and as such, only see the end is near.


The collective feeling at the meeting was there will be an undoubted expansion of quantum computing applications within this decade, which in turn will drive an increased demand for quantum engineers, scientists and technologists.

Cryo-CMOS Technology. Courtesy of The University of Sydney, Louise M. Cooper.

One of the questions that still needs to be figured out to ensure the talent pool is out there for industry to pick from is what makes someone quantum ready?


Currently, the proposition of what the ‘Quantum discipline’ should look like is still being formed. At the postgraduate and research degrees level, studying quantum will continue to draw upon the principles of such established disciplines as electronic engineering, computer science, physics and mathematics. However, a number of institutions have started to integrate the concepts of quantum mechanics and applications into their postgraduate courses, and to a lesser extent, into their undergraduate curriculum. But at an organisational level, should universities consider building capabilities in quantum, perhaps even starting Quantum Departments? The response to this question remains to be undetermined.


Blake Johnson the Lead of IBM’s Quantum Systems team offered an industry insight into the sort of individuals’ skillsets that a company like IBM would look for when recruiting people to a quantum computing function. Blake said: “quantum is a sufficiently complex problem that no one narrow discipline can tackle the whole problem”. So, today people with classical material science, electronic circuit design, power, signal processing and software development backgrounds are still being recruited, and subsequently transitioned, through specialist upskilling into the quantum field.

Removing the esoteric feel associated with the perceived mystery of quantum mechanics (e.g. superposition entanglement) and developing an intuition on the basis of how quantum qubits behave is absolutely essential in attracting more people into the quantum field.

Companies at the cutting-edge of the quantum technology field have started to offer textbooks and have opened access to their quantum computing platforms, made their quantum programming languages and methodologies available to researcher and developers, and even highlighted some of the problems that they have already encountered or are currently experiencing.


“Removing the esoteric feel associated with the perceived mystery of quantum mechanics (e.g. superposition entanglement) and developing an intuition on the basis of how quantum qubits behave is absolutely essential in attracting more people into the quantum field” Johnson added.


Professor Oliver also highlighted the fact that this field uses a lot of jargon, and with the aid of more professional development programmes, online courses and textbooks, the language will become more familiar. There was a general consensus that Quantum Computing, like many other engineering and technology fields still lacks attracting a wider diversity participation. However, when it comes to quantum, the unintentional diversity bias appears to be less hard-coded.


My conclusion from the meeting is that of great optimism. Whether or not we will have a useful general-purpose quantum computer within this decade, new quantum-related talent clusters have started to emerge and are becoming more pronounced to attract some of the best scientists, engineers and mathematicians from around the world. And, equally importantly, the wave-intensity behind rewiring the disciplines required by quantum, where the rule of discipline aggregation applies, is creating a new generation of people with new composite skillsets that will disrupt the educational space, and consequently, reshape the industrial landscape as we know it today, thus undoubtedly, yield valuable progress!

In the future, instead of quantum being that esoteric science only for the elite, it may well become the technological foundation in which society is run on and benefits from both economically and socially.

One thing that the MIT meeting has solidified in my mind is the magnitude of technological disruption that is coming down the pipe, ranging from deep learning to neuromorphic and quantum computing. And we can expect the rate of momentum in these technologies to speed up dramatically over next few decades. As a result of these technologies being introduced in more mainstream applications, we’ll see mega disruptions across all sectors of business and industry, as companies jockey and vie for new market dominance to gain value realisation from their innovations. This exponential evolution of technology will require an equally matched evolution in the social and ethical responsibilities and policies. Governments and public bodies will need to change the way in which they operate, to take advantage of quantum and associated AI technologies, but the rewards of faster service turnarounds for citizens, be those services in the health, housing, transport or policing, will guarantee the uptake of these technologies. In the future, instead of quantum being that esoteric science only for the elite, it may well become the technological foundation in which society is run on and benefits from both economically and socially, and which has the potential to underpin at a world level, mankind’s ability to develop, grow and succeed.

Prof Sa’ad Sam Medhat 

CEO, IKE Institute

28 February 2020

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