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Is routine maintenance your first priority?

Is routine maintenance your first priority?

By:  Briony Smith  On: 28 Feb 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Most respondents to a Strategic Counsel poll say there’s a serious IT skills shortage, and most IT staff see themselves as integral to the organization. Why three-quarters of students surveyed plan to look for work outside of Canada.

There really is an IT skills shortage, according to a Strategic Counsel survey released Thursday, but there were differing opinions between the executives, IT staff and students surveyed about its impact, and what role the IT staffer really plays in the enterprise, anyway.

The Strategic Counsel, a Toronto-based research and consulting firm, was commissioned by Microsoft Canada Co. to do the survey, which was conducted in January 2008 and comprised of 100 Canadian C-level executives, 200 IT professionals and 713 post-secondary students.

According to Andrew Dixon, director of Microsoft Windows Server Systems with Microsoft Canada, 90 per cent of the respondents agreed that there is a skills shortage in Canada, but their reactions to it differed. While 96 per cent of CIOs and 77 per cent of IT professionals think it’s a serious problem, only 60 per cent of C-level executives think it is a big deal.

The survey attributes this disconnect to the role that management sees IT as playing within the enterprise. More than three quarters (76 per cent) of C-level executives polled said that they see systems upkeep and maintenance as IT’s primary tasks. Nine in ten respondents said IT executives should be consulted when the business is making a strategic move, despite the fact that 69 per cent of C-level executives think “reactive” (ahead of “strategic” and “innovative) when considering their IT staff.

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However, more than three-quarters of the IT professionals polled said they see themselves as more of an integral part of the business, making a difference. This response is even more widespread among the post-secondary students surveyed; 85 per cent of them cited a challenging work environment as a priority. “These differing opinions offer a view on how differently people see the role of IT in business,” said Dixon.

“This should be expected,” said Warren Shiau, a lead analyst with the Strategic Counsel. “When you look at the big picture, year after year, there are critics of Canadian underinvestment in capital. They don’t have the product capital or IT infrastructure in place to compete when the dollar is at par. So when you see that C-level executives don’t feel that IT skills, it’s just a classic symptom of that underinvestment.”

But don’t you often hear in the IT industry of the business types calling out for a more business-, mission- and brand-savvy IT employee? Shiau attributes this somewhat common occurrence to the more innovative, vocal minority, saying that you don’t hear about the majority of IT staffers that continue to be seen as a utility.


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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.

Comments (2)

IT Manager
by Gideon Sheps 2/29/2008 12:00:00 AMWhile Microsoft might try to spin 'fewer keystrokes' as 'IT aspiration friendly' the truth (and we all know it) is that the cost of the upgrades get justified by showing that fewer staff are needed to keep the lights on. Being asked to participate in strategic and business building activities will only happen when the non-IT managers who oversee these activities change their mindset about the role of IT. Efficient operations is a way of plugging the skills gap by not having to hire. And frankly, that's the appeal to the guy who will sign the cheque. And Microsoft knows that.
Tech Support Analyst
by Jim 3/5/2008 12:00:00 AMI keep hearing about the IT shortage and I am currently mid career but finding it hard to get work. There still seems to be more applicants than jobs and the hiring process is long and drawn out.
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