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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

Orlov said that many established IT employees allow themselves to get closely associated with one company and lose their flexibility and mobility. “They need to try and stay prepared and pick up additional skills, so if they are downsized they will be able move,” she added.

Follow the customers

For junior IT workers who feel their IT career may be headed down the wrong path, Orlov suggested that these professionals seek out additional IT training whenever possible and embrace multiple responsibilities and hybrid positions.

“The closer you get to the customers, the higher degree of the risk, and the more likely that those jobs are never going to be outsourced,” she said. “So you want to figure out a way to get jobs that are associated with managing risk and security, architecture type roles, virtualization, and designing plans for making an employee base more mobile.”

On the security side, Daswani indicated that Sapphire Canada has tracked a significant increase in security administrators over the last two years. “It’s a critical area that will continue to grow as information systems become more strategic,” he added.

Daswani also indicated that his staffing firm is seeing continued demand among enterprises for Web developers. Java and .Net developers are still hugely in demand, as businesses keep exploring new initiatives and strategies around Web development, he said.










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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.

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