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Canadian IT needs a new coat of spackle, say analysts

Canadian IT needs a new coat of spackle, say analysts

By:  Nestor E. Arellano  On: 24 Jan 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The information technology (IT) industry in Canada needs an image makeover to save companies here from a looming skills shortage according to analysts and labour consultants.

The information technology (IT) industry in Canada needs an image makeover to save companies here from a looming skills shortage according to analysts and labour consultants.

Over the next five years, Canadian businesses will have to fill no less than 90,000 new IT positions, said Stephen Ibaraki, vice-president, Canadian Information Processing Society (CIPS) and association of IT professionals in Toronto.

However, Canadian colleges and universities will not produce the required number of qualified candidates for these positions.

Of the 90,000 vacancies, around 60,000 will be newly created positions and an estimated 30,000 will result from retirement.

"I've spoken with numerous talent brokers and they're telling me the demand can't be filled," said Ibaraki.

The CIPS executive said companies, educational institutions, and the government should work together to send out the message that "IT is cool again."

Analysts believe the personnel shortage is a result of IT's tainted image - a legacy of the disastrous "dot com bust". The period, roughly covering 1995 to 2001, saw the rapid founding and spectacular crashes of technology companies, particularly those in the Internet sector.

"IT has lost its glamour. Computer sciences don't really seem appealing to students as it was 10 to 25 years ago," said Any Woyzbun, lead analyst for research firm Info-Tech Research Group Inc., in London Ont.

He said students are probably being advised "at home or in schools" that IT is not a stable or attractive industry to be in.

Intensifying the problem is the fact that the number of IT workers retiring each year is growing.

More and more workers are retiring even before they reach 65. When these people leave, they take with them the knowledge of running legacy systems still widely used within the company and industry.

Woyzbun said the turnover of skilled IT workers can cause serious problems. He recalled an incident, three years ago, when the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) experienced a technical difficulty that prevented clients from transferring funds.

The incident was especially hard on companies that needed to release salary payments. It was later discovered that only a handful of older programmers understood how the malfunctioning system worked, the analyst said.

"It's a paradox," said Woyzbun. "The industry needs schools to teach leading edge technology to attract new blood. But companies also need young people who understand the older stuff to replace the retirees."

The recent growth of IT service outsourcing and off shoring has helped some companies deal with the shortage, said Ibaraki and Woyzbun. However, they noted that this practice is also contributing to the perception that it is not worthwhile to enrol in tech courses, as the jobs only go abroad.


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Nestor E. Arellano Nestor E. Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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