Cloud Computing Professionals Are In Demand

Newsletter HomeBackNext
Newsletter Topics

    • Cloud Computing Professionals in Demand
    • Keeping Your Best Performers
    • Hiring the Right Staff - Best Practices
    • Interviewing Best Practices


    IT Salary SurveyParticipate in IT Salary Survey

    Janco is just starting it data gathering for the 2011 Mid-Year IT Salary Survey.  Everyone who participates will get a copy of the summary data and those who provide at least ten (10) data points will get a copy of the full study.  In addition anyone who provides data within the next 30 days will be entered in a drawing for a fifty percent (50%) discount on any product in the eJobDescription.com catalog.  Just click here and follow the link to participate or cut and paste the link below into your browser

    https://ejobdescription.com/it_salary_survey.html#epm1_9


    Cloud Computing Professionals Are In Demand

    In this jobless recovery cloud computing job demand bucks the trend

    While much of the U.S. economy experiences a “jobless recovery,” the cloud computing sector hows and strong upward trend according to the Internet job hiring sites. Demand for technologists with cloud skills is surging, as shown listings of cloud computing positions at the job search engine Indeed. That trend is borne out in the current job listings from two of the largest cloud providers:

    • Amazon.com currently has job listings for more than 900 technical jobs, including at least 423 positions at Amazon Web Services, the company’s cloud computing operation

    • Rackspace Hosting is looking to fill 100 available positions in various IT areas at an upcoming job fair, Rackerpalooza 2011. Most of the growth at Rackspace over the past year has occurred in the company’s cloud computing business

    • Dice.com has 1,776 jobs posted with cloud in the job title

    • Monster.com has over 1,000 jobs posted with cloud as one the job requirements


    Poaching Likely to Increase

    A recent survey from accounting firm BDO found that cloud adoption was a factor in technology companies’ plans to boost hiring in 2011. Forty six percent of CFOs at tech companies said they expect  to boost employee headcount this year, while just 7 percent expected staff to decrease.

    “Technology companies have switched gears from survival to growth mode,” said a leader in the Technology and Life Sciences Practice at BDO USA, LLP. “The flexibility and scalability of cloud computing created cost-effective infrastructures that allowed adopters to weather the recession and emerge ahead of the curve. These forward-thinking companies are now giving the green light to new initiatives, and plan to devote resources to attracting and retaining top talent.”

    The demand for cloud technologists may also lead to more  poaching of experienced workers from competitors. A recent survey by Dice.com found that 62 percent of hiring managers and recruiters anticipate that tech talent poaching will get more aggressive this year, while just 1 percent of respondents saw it receding. “There are few consequences for technology professionals should they decide to jump to a competitor,” Dice reports. “Only 11 percent of hiring managers said they would not allow a former employee to return after being poached.”

    Janco feels that the recovery has not taken hold and the IT job market will be soft for at least one more quarter. Janco predicts there will be more churn in IT staff as CIOs accelerate their move to more flexible staffing models. CIOs are outsourcing more technical work, including managed IP services such as VoIP and VPNs. They are hiring more contractors for desktop and security services, and they are putting more applications such as remote backup in the cloud. At the same time, they are looking to hire IT people with business and analytical skills, such as risk management and project management. CIOs report that they're having trouble hiring IT people because either they can't find IT professionals with the right business skills or they can't afford them. All of this means more turnover in IT departments.


    Read on...


    Keeping Your Best Performers

    Do you know who the employees are that you must keep at all cost?

    With the current business environment, there are some things managers should consider to improve morale and keep their most valuable assets - good staff.  They are:

    • Take care of your "A" players - Do not project the attitude that "you are lucky to have a job".  The best players are hardest to come by and will always have career options.   IT organizations feel this more than others.  A CIO's "A" players will always be sought by their competitors and the same players know they can be successful at any company.

      Job Descriptions
    • It is the wrong time to make cutbacks in your incentive compensation plans  Many IT stars are motivated by money; do not make major changes to their compensation plans or their projects unless it only benefits them.  Top IT professionals want to do develop their skills, work on key projects, and be recognized for their contribution.  Almost any change can be viewed negatively.

    • At all costs, avoid across the board layoffs or restructuring -If necessary, make cutbacks based solely upon performance.  It is a good time to look at your "C " players and work them out of the business, with the intention of finding an "A " player as their replacement.  Another benefit to this type of employment action is that you give your competitors less chance to tell your clients that your business is struggling and it was necessary to resort to layoffs.

    • Start planning for the future by acting now - Many companies are limiting hiring in response to the unknown certainty of our economy and future business climate.  Use your "A" players in planning for the future, do not keep your plans a secret.  If you best performers see they have future with you they are more likely to stay.
    Read On...
    Simplify Recruiting - Making Sure You Hire the Right Staff

    2011 Edition of Job Descriptions Released - 2011 Salary Data Available

    The recession has been a big challenge for HR departments, as key IT professionals worry about working with reduced staff and tenuous job security. But amid that urgent pressure,CIO and IT managers need to make sure their HR strategy is looking long term as well, and to make sure HR, IT, and business unit leaders are driving change together.

    IT job descriptions
    It's a good time for CIO and IT managers to pressure HR to have a bigger impact. There's an expanding tool set today for doing interactive performance tracking and getting deeper insight into your company's talent pool, while also wringing more efficiency out of automation. HR and IT teams working together should be able to get results.

    Building the IT Staff your company needs to succeed requires offering the right jobs at the right salary levels. Only the IT Hiring Resource Kit provides the industry-standard job descriptions and up-to-date salary data you need to recruit top talent as effectively and efficiently as possible. The salary survey includes a list of the benefits provided by enterprises of all size. Is your company providing the right benefits.

    This indispensable resource provides up-to-date salary data gathered through an extensive survey of businesses throughout the United States and Canada, plus polished job descriptions for the 73 IT positions surveyed. This proprietary information will reduce the time it takes to recruit top talent and ensure that you get the right person for each job. 

    Read on...


    Interviewing Best Practices

    Hiring is the most critical aspect of a CIO's role.  For a CIO it can be fatal of they hire a new employee find out there is a mismatch. 

    Background screening is a critical part of the hiring process for the majority of organizations today, but it is even more essential in the current economy for several reasons. eJobDescription.com has found that a shortage of key skills is the number one challenge facing CIOs and IT functions. This may seem counter-intuitive at first given the news of continued high levels of unemployment and a "jobless" economic recovery. However coupled with many interviews with CIOs and HR professionals in end-user organizations, confirms that finding the right talent - the talent with the right mix of skills, behaviors and values to fit with the organization - is still a challenge. In fact, more applicants in the pool makes filtering and screening even more critical to ensure that time isn't wasted on candidates who aren't a good fit or who might not be qualified for the position.

    Hiring managers understand that an interviewee's capability does not necessarily equal that they are a good fit. Capability refers to the skills, tools and experience that a person needs to successfully perform a job. It is no secret that most candidates exaggerate their abilities on their resumes and job applications.  Things to look for are:

    • Skills Definition - Good Job Descriptions - Do you know what skills are needed to perform the job and whether the employee possesses those skills? If they do not possess the necessary skills, how will the CIO help them to acquire them, and how long do you expect that process to take?  It is in everyone's best interest for the CIO to set appropriate expectations for the employee from the beginning. This is especially true if the job requires special technical capabilities.
    • Tools Definition - Good IT Infrastructure - Even if an individual has the skills and experience to do the job, do they have the tools to deliver peak performance? For example, a highly skilled and experienced web designer cannot build a website without adequate computer hardware and software. The tools do not have to be the most up-to-date, but a system that crashes can be incredibly frustrating and unproductive, even to the best performer.
    • Experience - Just because an employee has the skills to do a job does not mean that they has the experience to apply those skills in his specific position. This is especially true for recent graduates, outside hires from different industries and internal hires from different departments. While the required skills may be similar from one job to the next, differing applications and terminology may require that the new hire take time to learn the nuances of his new position.

    Read on...