SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> IT Workplace >> Human Resources Issues

Outmanoeuvre before you’re outsourced

Outmanoeuvre before you’re outsourced

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 16 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

As stock markets tumble and corporations look for cost savings, not every job in the data centre is safe. Canadian IT labour experts identify the skills that offer the greatest longevity

If you work in data centre operations, at the help desk of an IT call centre, or as a programmer for an aging coding language like COBOL, it might be time to consider a new career path, according to a former Forrester Research analyst.

With the increasing trend toward consolidation and outsourcing in the IT industry, the need for entry and intermediate level IT jobs is quickly evaporating. Laurie Orlov, principal analyst and head at LMO Insight, said that IT pros currently working in data centres might be some of the first to feel the effects of consolidation.

More in our IT Workplace Knowledge Centre

16 hot roles for IT pros

“Internal IT in a consolidating world isn’t going to be the best place in the data centre,” Orlov, who also spent nine years as a vice-president and principal analyst at Forrester, said. “Running around loading back-ups onto servers and that sort of thing is going to be subject to consolidation.”

But according to Haresh Daswani, a team lead and sales manager at Toronto-based IT staffing firm Sapphire Technologies Canada Ltd., data centre consolidation may actually create new roles for IT professionals to pursue.

“We’ve seen increasingly demand for folks that can architect these consolidated data centres,” he said. “Network architects that consolidate back-end applications as well as overall enterprise architects have grown by 30 per cent across Canada.”

Orlov agreed, saying that IT pros working in the data centre should look into picking up knowledge on automation software and how to manage multiple systems.

The impact of outsourcing, however, isn’t up for debate. Outsourcing has already been seen at the help desks and call centres for many major Canadian enterprises. But Orlov said that it won’t stop there and warned that IT operations jobs — especially ones without a strong career path — may also be on the chopping block.

“People who set up and configure laptops and PCs in IT are not in a hot field right now,” she added. “Programming jobs for third or fourth generation programming languages should also not be a career path of choice.”

Daswani added that mainframe developers have become a dying breed in recent years.

Exact matches only

While Orlov acknowledged the highly publicized IT skills shortage, she indicated that many of the unfilled jobs are highly technical or senior management roles. She said that recruiters are often unwilling to settle for anything less than an exact match when looking to hire.

“Rather than send somebody out for the appropriate amount of SAP training that they need, employers are looking for that SAP expert that can hit the ground running,” she said. “It really is a field of people with toolkits, and in their toolkits they have the most current skills that they need in order to have the greatest degree of flexibility in their career. But if they let their tools rust, they might find themselves under-qualified.”


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 1183   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

Related Content

Obama wants to keep tech jobs in the U.S.
Obama wants to keep tech jobs in the U.S.Sen. Barack Obama attacked offshore outsourcing in his Democratic presidential nomination acceptance speech
Rogers to roll out iPhone 3G July 11
Rogers to roll out iPhone 3G July 11The device will work on Rogers Wireless’s HSPA and EDGE networks and has GPS capability. Apple announced the third-generation wireless version of iPhone at its developers conference
‘Sweet’ iPhone solution leaves many with sour aftertaste
‘Sweet’ iPhone solution leaves many with sour aftertaste “A pretty sweet solution," is how Steve Jobs has described Apple’s plan to permit the building of Web-based applications for the iPhone, while withholding a software development kit and full access for creating native apps. But Jobs’ announcement hasn’t exactly sweetened the disposition of many developers.
SOA turns coders into programming snobs
even though everyone claims the concept of a service-oriented architecture has been around for years, it's probably too early to offer a real

Comments (1)

COBOL is dead
by Peter 9/18/2008 12:00:00 AMAs a career COBOL is dead. They use it but companies don't want these skills set. I did a search on reed.co.uk in london for COBOL and got only one hit (http://www.reed.co.uk/job/searchresults.aspx?k=cobol&jto=false&s=&l=london&lp=&ms=From&mxs=To&st=5&ns=true&da=168). This is just an example of the demand of COBOL. If you are looking for a university course your better of looking for a course which can get you a job in development - doing anything to do with COBOL is a waste of time. Check that the course teaches languages with job opportunities. Don believe the misconceptions that COBOL is going to be in demand in the future. This is just hype put into the industry my companies which provide COBOL services and produces. If COBOL was going to be in demand in the near future the industry would put COBOL in there job specifications. Also COBOL works and if it works companies will not change it. Why spend the money on it at all. But the days are numbered for COBOL as you cant keep adding plug-ins, enhancements to get it to work with new technology. Thanks for reading - now I need to find a company which can convert my old land line telephone to take a mobile SIM card and a battery pack.
Name: (required) eMail: (optional)

Your email address will not appear online and will be used only if the editor wishes to contact you personally for additional comments.