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Making the most of your skills

12 Mar 2009, Karen Price, Computing

http://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/opinion/1822297/making-skills

Karen Price
The downturn has heightened the need for IT skills

By now, most businesses are starting to feel the impact of the global economic downturn. It is not surprising that some IT professionals are beginning to grow concerned about their future.

However, the latest assessment of UK GDP trends by the Office of National Statistics highlights only one area of growth – computing – set against an overall contraction of 1.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2008.

This relative strength is probably due to a number of reasons, including the increasing importance of technology in day-to-day business operations and its ability to help companies weather the economic storm and rebuild after the recession.

Making this happen requires talented and experienced IT professionals. Whether you are looking for career progression or job security, a good place to start is in making sure you have up-to-date skills and knowledge in areas that employers value.

Employers are increasingly looking for business-focused technology specialists. They need people who understand the organisation and the client, can communicate clearly, solve problems and manage projects. Technology professionals who can demonstrate these skills are immensely valuable to business, and remain in short supply.

That is not to say that technical skills don’t matter. It’s just that by themselves they are often not enough. Employers want to know that you can use your technical knowledge to solve real problems.

Innovation continues to matter to companies – and innovation is underpinned by technology. IT professionals need the technical and creative skills to drive innovation, as well as the people skills to help their colleagues through the resulting IT-enabled change.

It is worth evaluating your skills and experience against these trends. Opt for formal qualifications, but remember that all learning counts – including that acquired on the job or through informal training. The benefits of time spent building knowledge will outlast the downturn and help us to prepare for the opportunities that lie ahead.

After all, IT is an industry of change. To thrive in this environment, it helps to be able to change and grow along with it. Continuous skills development should be second nature to us all.

Karen Price is chief executive of e-Skills UK, the sector skills council for business and information technologyy

Reader comments

Employers attitudes sustain the skills shortage

"Opt for formal qualifications, but remember that all learning counts - including that acquired on the job or through informal training...."
Nonsense. I have 20 years of commercial IT experience, just completed an MSc, and am currently teaching myself new IT skills at home, but I have been unable to get an interview, despite applying for scores of jobs in the last 6 months, not even by offering to work for free. And my situation is sadly not unusual.

Employers - or at least recruitment agents - are not interested in training or qualifications, because they are too busy playing "buzzword bingo" with a long list of dozens of "must have" skills that only about 7 people on the UK market actually possess.

They ignore the fact that an experienced and well-trained developer with 90% of those skills could probably pick up the remaining 10% very quickly on the job. And then they complain about a "skills shortage" and ship the work offshore instead, thereby removing further opportunities for UK-based IT workers to gain those skills. Meanwhile the government is trying to encourage the development of IT skills, even while major employers are throwing hundreds of experienced workers who already have most of those skills onto the scrapheap.

The UK IT industry does not want people with IT skills, is not prepared to train/re-train its own staff in the skills it claims to require, and refuses to recognise the efforts or adaptability of experienced workers who have invested in developing their own skills.

Posted by: ChrisW  26 May 2009

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