Some IT skills see pay hikes during downturn
- 24 April, 2009 03:34
- Comments
Budget dollars may be tight for most companies, but that doesn't mean enterprise IT departments can do without the technology skills, talent and certifications they need to better navigate a down economy.
Research released this week by Foote Partners shows that some skills continue to pay well, despite the recession. The research firm's data showed that pay for 60 skills and certifications declined in the first quarter, yet another 46 skills and certifications experience increases in pay during the same time period.
"This is not at all unexpected," said David Foote, the firm's co-founder, CEO and chief research officer, in a statement. "First, pay for skills is, by its nature and purpose, more dynamic than salaries. Employers use it tactically and strategically to attract and retain talent. And second, the fact is that premium pay for skills is even more important during tough economic times when fear and uncertainty about job security clouds the judgment of IT professionals."
Foote Partners tracks pay for 371 certified and noncertified IT skills, and its first quarter research shows that pay for certified skills in Java/J2EE, SE and ME experienced a 20% increase in the past three months. Pay for PHP skills rose 14.3% during that same period, while pay for certified Linux skills increased by more than 28%. Pay for certified skills in Apache HTTP Web server and Sybase Adaptive Server each increased by 25% in the first three months of 2009, and pay for HTTP skills rose by 20%. Certified skills such as unified communications/messaging and Microsoft SQL server also saw pay increases by about 9% each.
As for noncertified skills, Foote Partners research saw similar trends. Pay for Linux skills rose by more than 28%, while Apache and Sybase noncertified skills saw 25% increases in pay. Pay for Java and HTTP skills increased by 20%, while IT professionals with PHP, SAP and Unix noncertified skills experienced a more than 14% pay increase. Pay for various noncertified skills in virtualization also saw an increase of more than 12%, according to the research firm.
The shift in pay for specific skills points to IT hiring manager being more strategic regarding in-house talent and potential external sources, Foote explained.
"There's a lot of hiring and reshuffling of talent right now. It's not a 'deer in headlights' situation like it was for many during the last recession," Foote said. "Companies have serious labor requirements and many are aggressively stepping up, using compensations wisely to meet the demand for specific skills."
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
-
Australia's first 4G smartphone is the HTC Velocity 4G
-
Swedish e-commerce startup's execs linked to NYC sex crime
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
How to implement next-generation storage infrastructure for Big Data
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
5 Best Practices for Achieving Peak Performance in SAP Environments
Given how deeply businesses rely on their SAP systems, it’s simple to see that maximizing performance and uptime is critical. What’s not so simple is figuring out how to understand, let alone optimize, performance in these complex, dynamic, and interrelated ecosystems. This paper offers five best practices that can help administrators more effectively measure and improve SAP performance. -
Workshifting: a global market research report
New business requirements are transforming the demands placed on IT. To operate effectively in today’s fast-paced global environment, organisations need to be able to get work done anywhere, anytime, by any type of worker to achieve the best results. This is the context for the rise of workshifting—the practice of moving work to the most optimal location, time and resources. As one of the most comprehensive reports ever conducted into the role of desktop virtualisation in enabling workplace flexibility and mobility, it reflects the growing consensus of those using technology to improve the performance of their organisation. -
Magic Quadrant for Enterprise Disk-Based Backup/Recovery
While backup is among the oldest, most performed tasks in the data center, the industry is undergoing significant change as organisations accelerate new technology adoption and show a propensity to implement new solutions, in some cases from vendors that are emerging or new to the backup market.
-
Alan Simpson's Windows 98 Bible
-
Beginning Iphone SDK Programming with Objective-c
-
Photoshop Elements 7 for Dummies ®
-
Programming for the Series 60 Platform and Symbian OS - Digia Series 60
-
Iwork '09 Portable Genius
-
Scjp
-
Professional Jakarta Struts (Wrox Press)
-
The Internet for Dummies 4E Australian Edition
-
Fedora 5 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 4 Bible








Comments
Post new comment