If you didn't work in IT, where would you go? What could you do?Though IT
employment is at an all-time high in the U.S.--some 3.8
million employed residents in the U.S. consider themselves IT professionals
according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data, a record high--and is expected to
climb even higher--computer and mathematical sciences jobs
expected to grow faster
than any other professional occupation through 2016, nearly a 25 percent
increase--there are those that work in the field that no longer think it's all
it's cracked up to be.
Salary competition from offshore outsourcing, companies posting ads that expressly favor H-1B visa holders to the
exclusion of U.S. workers,
the fear for job safety that comes in a recession year and the constant pressure to keep skills up to date have worn some tech
professionals out to a point that they would consider alternative careers.
"I'm a
male Oracle DBA in my late 40's, and though my job is lucrative, it's also
endless, with lots of evenings and weekends devoured by a constantly changing
environment… Who wants a job where today's honored Master is tomorrow's
washed-up Dinosaur?" wrote an anonymous commenter on an eWEEK article last
month.
Some that do end up leaving find new life in far-flung careers.
"Because
of the unscheduled overtime and travel, I left this field as demands of my
growing family increased. I was fortunate enough to be able to use my skills in
the academic arena," wrote another anonymous commenter.
Janice
Weinberg, a career consultant and former IT professional, has been advising
techies for years about their next career moves, should computers no longer be
the job they want.
"When the
media coverage of offshore outsourcing reached a frenzy level, I began reading
articles about how to prepare for the loss of a job. I saw a lot of people
giving advice about what other careers IT people might consider and they were
being coached to try something completely different, like becoming teaching or
becoming a chef because these jobs required individualized, non-remote
interactions and could not be offshored," said Weinberg.
Weinberg said
she thought it would be a shame if IT professionals who once liked their work
were force to make 180-degree turn from it, and began compiling a list that she
later turned into a book [Debugging Your Information
Technology Career, Elegant Fix Press, 2008]
which she hopes will serve as a compass to new and rewarding fields that build
on computer professionals' knowledge.
"When
people are forced to seek new employment, due to offshoring or the recession,
they often use that time to consider alternatives. I think that IT
professionals should be aware of the fact that they don't have to waste all of
the time they spent in IT," said Weinberg.
Starting in a
completely new field is almost accompanied by a precipitous decline in income,
unless one goes back to school for a new advanced degree, and sometimes even if
they do.
"Some of
these are jobs IT pros have heard of; others they might not have though
of," said Weinberg.
Though most of
the roles suggested in her book aren't computer-related jobs, computer
proficiency is a prerequisite to all of them.
For example,
Weinberg suggest that a business analyst or software developer who guided
finance of sales staff in defining the IT requirements could becoming a global
procurement project manager supporting one of those functions.
"A
network security administrator's experience would be quite valuable in a
cyber-liability insurance broker or underwriter role," Weinberg gives as
another example.
Jim
Lanzalotto, vice president of marketing and services for Yoh, a technology
recruiting firm in Philadelphia, says that the very first thing an IT
professional who is thinking of a career change should consider is what their
transferable skills are.
One person he
consulted, a vice president of infrastructure at a technology company said he
wanted to do something else but be able to leverage what he did well: getting
stuff done.
"This is
the most transferable skill for an IT worker, whether they go into another
technology job or to a R&D firm or a construction company--the ability to
execute projects," said Lanzalotto.
A good place
to start would be to look at your resume, said Lanzalotto, and find these
executable skills there, from getting project done on time or under-budget or
managing a team of coders.
"Project
and program managers have the most immediately transferable skills. Once you
have a PMI certification, you can project manage anything, anywhere," said
Lanzalotto.
Other
transferable skills lie within the technology themselves. A techie with strong
ERP skills will be able to transfer this to any company that want to undertake
an SAP implementation, even if they're not the person doing it.
However,
before applying for new jobs Lanzalotto reminds potential job-hoppers to do
their best to figure out what went wrong with the job in the first place.
"A lot of
it is at the end of the day, you will figure out what those things are when you
look in the mirror and do a practical honest assessment of yourself and figure
out what you didn't like. Sometimes it was the people and sometimes it was
you," said Lanzalotto.
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