Increased IT Hiring on Horizon, Survey Suggests
More than three-quarters (78 percent) of human resources managers or
recruiters who have responsibility in recruiting technology positions
are looking to hire IT workers in the next six months, according to the
2010 IT Hire Intelligence Survey conducted by Monster.com, an online
career and recruitment resource on behalf of technology services
provider Technisource. In addition, the majority of survey respondents
said they are confident that their company's performance will improve
across the same time period.
Among the key findings, 76 percent of respondents have confidence that their company's performance will improve in the next six months, while 78 percent of respondents plan to hire IT staff in the next six months. When asked what technology-oriented positions IT hiring managers were looking to fill, applications and infrastructure positions took the lead.
Of the companies planning to hire, only 26 percent are new openings and only 9 percent are replacement positions. The remaining percentage is a combination of both. When recruiting IT talent, job boards, referrals and social media are top methods for doing so, according to IT HR technology managers and recruiters. According to respondents, salary and stability of position lead in recruiting technology talent to an organization, but a company's reputation came in a close third in order of importance.
"This new report clearly shows that the IT hiring picture is bright and
there seems to be a need for large amounts of IT professionals over the
next six months," said Michael Winwood, president of
Technisource. "Many companies are not only starting to invest in
projects that were previously put on hold, but also new technologies.
To ensure these get implemented efficiently, companies need to invest
in additional talent. We believe these key learning's could be
contributing factors to the overall stabilization of the economy.
It seems that the recessionary train of thought is changing - companies
are clearly focusing on growth opportunities instead of basic survival
mode."
Adding to a sense of optimism is a report
released in May by the U.S. Department of Labor, which found despite
continued volatility in many IT employment segments, the largest net
monthly job gain in IT-related jobs recorded since the Wall Street
financial crisis was realized in April. The study, fielded via an
online survey of more than 400 U.S. SMB executives in February 2010,
reached businesses in vertical markets including manufacturing, finance
and insurance, health care, government, and professional services.
A CompTIA report also found SMBs are considering IT solutions including
virtualization (interest is strongest in the area of server
virtualization, where 37 percent of SMBs plan to adopt over the next 12
months) and unified communications; 25 percent of SMBs expect to adopt
a VOIP (voice-over-IP) solution this year.
