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Salary survey reveals a strong market

Salary survey reveals a strong market

By:  Briony Smith  On: 24 Oct 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

CIOs often entice employees with sign-on bonuses, equity incentives and professional development opportunities

In such a complex hiring environment, CIOs are often finding it a challenge to fill positions efficiently, but are still enticing employees with things like sign-on bonuses, equity incentives, and professional development opportunities. New hires are making out well, too—according to the report, “businesses…are increasing compensation levels for new hires at nearly all levels of experience.” In the United States, starting salaries are expected to rise by 5.3 per cent, with a rise of seven per cent for in-demand jobs areas, like lead applications developers, messaging administrators and data modelers.

Canada in particular also will see continued growth, “spurred by investment in a wide range of industries, with oil and gas, IT development, healthcare, and professional services chief among them,” according to the report, which said that “companies large and small are in need of skilled IT professionals who can assist in the expansion of information systems and support ever-growing technology teams and infrastructure.”

Canadian positions that are especially in demand, according to Thompson, are in project management, applications and Web development, networking, and technical support. He said that he wasn’t particularly surprised by these popular positions, as, he said, “On the application side, companies have to deliver more application and system upgrades, and bigger infrastructure.” Thompson also said that the project manager revival has been going strong for a few years now, as businesses need specific implementations and strategies taken care of.

Networking and help desk/user support are the fastest-growing positions, with Windows administration, network administration, and database management the most sought-after skill-set. When it comes to the main drivers behind hiring pushes, network and desktop security, applications and Web development, wireless communications, business intelligence, new investment, and database administration and management were cited by IT execs.

But it isn’t just the hard skills that employers seek, but the soft skills, too. According to the report, “Soft skills and business acumen have become increasingly important in twenty-first century IT departments. An understanding of broader business and industry trends is valuable, as IT professionals assume more visible roles in shaping a company’s strategic decisions and in helping increase efficiencies and profits.” Said Thompson: “CIOs are looking for that full package of soft skills and hard technical skills. It’s no longer about code monkeys sitting in the corner—they have to keep business and IT aligned.”

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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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