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Transferable skills for IT pros: How to change jobs

Transferable skills for IT pros: How to change jobs

By:  Shane Schick  On: 05 Jan 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The author of a career management book for technology workers says the recession could see IT managers and CIOs looking at alternatives that have little to do with data centres or ERP systems. Consider these options

IT professionals who find themselves out of work amid the global economic recession could wind up working as stock equity analysts, insurance underwriters or health-care administrators, according to the author of a recent book on alternative technology career paths.

A former IT executive with companies such as GE and IBM, Janice Weinberg offers 20 different options for IT managers and CIOs who want to change gears in Debugging Your Information Technology Career, published by Elegant Fix Press. Each chapter also includes a “recession resistance” chapter that examines how vulnerable various jobs are to economic downturns, and what executives can do to ride out the bad times.

Weinberg, a consultant based in Westport, Conn., said she first started thinking about the book around 2004, when the outsourcing of traditional IT functions in corporate enterprises was creating widespread fear and uncertainty among technology professionals, particularly in the U.S. At the time, she said there weren’t a lot of options offered to those affected.

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“What I did see – which is what disturbed me – is IT professionals taking 180-degree career changes because of their predicament,” she said, citing IT professionals she knew who became teachers, nurse’s aides or entered the culinary arts. “I looked at these dramatic changes and I could not understand why I’m not reading about the ways that people who have invested a lot of time, energy and money in the computer-related disciplines wouldn’t try to leverage their knowledge and using it as an asset to enter and succeed in alternative fields.”

Weinberg said some of the options her book offers, such as a health-care administrator, might seem out of left field, but she points out that with the interest in physician order-entry and the development of medication error-detection systems, the transferable skills are there. Some of her alternatives, such as stock or equity analyst, may require IT managers to go back for their MBA, but 11 out of the 20 options involve a more natural move, she said.

“Think about someone who has been network security manager or administrator. Well, one of the hot areas in insurance these days is cyber-liability insurance because of the exposure companies have to external and internal forces compromising data. One could make a transition which is highly transferable.”

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Shane Schick Shane Schick is the Editor-in-Chief of IT World Canada. Follow him at Twitter.com/shaneschick, Facebook.com/Shane.Schick.Media or myi.tw/ShaneSchickGoogle.

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I think I understand gen X a little better
good day to everyone, this is my first guest blog and the subject comes from observing my 15 year old son complete a project for high school about his desired career, being a helicopter pilot for the canadian forces.he obviously doesn't want the fun that comes from being a cio in a midsized firm and living
Here's to the 12 per cent of trustworthy IT administrators
i don’t really buy it: a survey came out last week which said 88 per cent o
She's just not that into tech
i had expected to see more of drew barrymore in the film he’s just not tha

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