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Five ways to keep your IT employees during a recession

Five ways to keep your IT employees during a recession

By:  Briony Smith  On: 08 Jan 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The recession is unpleasant for everyone -- especially when you have a position to fill, or career paths to consider. Read on for ways to make weathering the recession and keeping your career on-track as painless as possible.

The recession has added a whole new layer to the usual frustrations and challenges faced by IT managers in finding and keeping good IT staff, and IT pros looking to keep their careers on track. Luckily, there are ways for both employers and employees to make sure they stay mutually satisfied, even in a glum economy.

A poll released Thursday by Robert Half International quizzed 100 Canadian senior executives between September and October on their greatest staffing concern.

Thirty-five per cent of respondents cited retention as their biggest worry, while staff morale was the second-greatest concern (23 per cent). Twenty-two per cent of respondents said that recruitment worried them the most, while another 17 per cent claimed that productivity was their greatest staffing concern.

But whether you’re an employer or employee, there are ways to ease your staffing concerns -- and it might not be as bad as you think. “We’re finding that people really are focusing on retention,” said senior research analyst Jennifer Perrier-Knox of Info-Tech Research Group. “This is no time to lose people.”

So how best to stay on top?

1) Try and make the best of it.

Executives tend to panic during recessions, and demand IT staff cuts. Instead, make a case for IT being the company saviour during tough times. IT can always be used to get ahead so that, when the recession is over, the company is innovative and ahead of the game instead of on its last legs.

This might even mean hiring a few new key people to make the company as lean as possible to make it through to the other side. “Now you have the leisure of time to hire the best people, and the most strategic people,” said Rod Miller, regional vice-president for Robert Half Technology.

2) Don’t get too comfortable.

According to Perrier-Knox, some employers do take advantage of recessions…in a bad way.

“They figure that there aren’t any jobs out there, so they don’t have to worry. Well, there may be no jobs for some people, but highly skilled individuals always have a place to go.” And if you treat employees badly during a recession, they may stick it out, sure, but they’ll leave you as soon as conditions change.

Miller said, “This means recognizing when individuals make a contribution. It doesn’t have to be money at all. It could be a pat on the back, or a thank-you note, even.”

3) Keep growing.

It’s important for employers to familiarize themselves with how best to hold onto valuable employees, especially in these troubled times. Job growth is what most IT employees secretly yearn for, and it’s something that is very important to the younger workers, said Perrier-Knox.


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Briony Smith Briony Smith is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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Comments (2)

Keep IT employees
by GuardianBob 3/9/2009 12:00:00 AMMarc is totaly right! But he forgot one detail. Once the corporate (boss) has hired the kid suggested by the recruting company (those that hate old people), he has to call someone like US to fix the mess made by the 'newest' technologies and their programmers (spaghetti-programmer). I am in a way very happy to get out of this field soon because from what I see happening, it will not get better before it gets wayyyyy worse! Thank you recruting firms for your stupidity and avidity, you will be the end of REAL IT!
quibble
by Marc 1/9/2009 12:00:00 AMYou write 'highly skilled individuals always have a place to go'. This is provably untrue. What's true is that 'YOUNG, skilled individuals might always have a place to go'. But in IT, if you're over 35 or 40, forget it. Doesn't matter how skilled you are, the people doing the hiring will filter you out. They seem to think that people get obsolete just like the technology they work with. I used to be highly skilled - 6 years ago. Now, I'm 6 years out of date, but apparently still 'overqualified' for all the positions I apply for. Junior, senior, doesn't matter. What they mean, of course, is that I'm 'too old'.

My suggestion to companies who want to retain employees: hire an older IT person who has been unemployed for a bit. Pay them crap. They'll stay. They know that at their age, they don't have a chance anywhere else.

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