SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> Consulting and Contracting

Mismatched job titles

Mismatched job titles

By:  Lauren Gibbons Paul  On: 23 Nov 2006 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Given the shortage in skilled IT professionals in many geographic regions and for many network-oriented jobs, retaining the best employees is critically important. And until your company pays its IT staff for the jobs they actually do, as opposed to what the titles might suggest, you’ll be vulnerable to someone else poaching your best people.

What’s in a title? When you work in IT, apparently, not much. From network administrator to network engineer, there is little agreement about what tasks that job actually entails and what skills the job holder must possess.

One position might require extensive security experience, as well as network-skills certification, while another job with the same title might be a glorified help-desk post. So, does it make sense that the pay ranges would be roughly the same for both?

This is a longstanding problem, according to David Foote of Foote Partners. “IT jobs do not get a lot of respect. These jobs include lots of duties and skills for which companies do not compensate,” says Foote, president, co-founder and chief recruitment officer of the IT compensation and workforce management firm.

Given the shortage in skilled IT professionals in many geographic regions and for many network-oriented jobs, retaining the best employees is critically important. And until your company pays its IT staff for the jobs they actually do, as opposed to what the titles might suggest, you’ll be vulnerable to someone else poaching your best people.

“Even if a company is paying 100 per cent of the going market value for that position, they’re vulnerable to a competitor coming in and offering skill-based pay rates,” Foote says. “Companies can no longer pay for titles. They have to pay for skills.”

If you’re going to keep up, you’re going to have to pay based on an individual’s skills and certifications — and how he or she applies them on the job. According to a Foote Partners survey in July, employers now incorporate skills pay into the compensation of more than half the IT workers in the United States and Canada. This represents a major departure, according to Foote.

Five years ago, bonuses were the most common way for an employer to redress a gap between someone’s job and their paycheck. Bonuses largely disappeared during the recession.

START REVAMPING

Now that the economy has picked back up again — and along with it, demand for hot IT skills — employers must start to revamp stale job descriptions, add in skills pay to overall compensation and use bonuses in cases where the proper job description is a moving target. Companies (especially those in highly competitive geographic areas, such as urban centres) are paying base salary plus a bonus for certifications and a 10 per cent or 15 per cent premium for certain hot skills, such as network security.

“Technology changes so fast, and the job requirements are different from day to day,” says Brian Gabrielson, national practice director for Robert Half Technology, a unit of Robert Half International, in Menlo Park, Calif. Companies cannot hope to revisit the titles often enough to keep each one perfectly in tune.

And sorting through IT titles and reclassifying people is difficult, time-consuming and often unpopular among the very people who should be helped by the effort. Workers often feel destabilized when their titles and compensation come under review, even if the point of the exercise is to increase their pay to align with market conditions, Foote says.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 690   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Lauren Gibbons Paul Lauren Gibbons Paul 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.

Related Content

Opinion Top 10 dead computer skills
Opinion Top 10 dead computer skillsThose in search of eternal life need look no further than the computer industry. In fact, the harder you try to declare a technology dead, it seems, the more you turn up evidence of its continuing existence. Nevertheless, after speaking with several industry stalwarts, we've compiled a list of skills and technologies that, while not dead, can perhaps be said to be in the process of dying.
Wireless knowledge becoming hot skill
Wireless knowledge becoming hot skillThe demand for wireless skills is rising as companies in an improving economy look to expand and catch up on postponed IT projects, according to a recent study by Robert Half Technology, a division of the global staffing and placement firm.
Demand rises for wireless skills
Demand rises for wireless skillsScan the job postings: IT network job descriptions increasingly cite wireless skills among the requirements. There also has been an influx of training courses in wireless and certification programs aimed at wireless administration and security. These are adding luster — and pay increases — to a range of wireless network positions.
We're laughing at you, not with you
normally we focus on the it-specific surveys that come out of robert half, but one caught my eye the other day
LinkedIn guilt: The new social networking disease
“linkedin,” the cio said. “that thing drives me nuts.”i was in a meeting today with one of our editorial advisory boards when the above statement was made. these are not really public discussions, so i won’t mention names, but suffice it to say this is a really likeable guy who’s running a major technology operation for a well-known canadian company. we were talking about the whole soci
blog comments powered by Disqus