
IT know-how "not enough" for future workers, says Gartner
By Steve Ranger
Published: 11 November 2005 14:05 GMT
Good technical skills won't be enough for workers who want to hold onto their jobs in IT, as staff need to show off new business skills to attract employers.
Scepticism about the effectiveness of IT, increasing automation and offshoring will lead to the emergence of a new breed of IT professionals who combine technical aptitude, local knowledge, knowledge of industry processes and leadership ability, according to analyst Gartner.
Workers will have to prove they understand the realities of the business, such as industry and customer issues and regulation, as three out of five will have business-facing roles within five years.
Diane Morello, vice president of research at Gartner, said in a statement: "Some will be bolstered, some will be carved up, some will be redistributed and some will be displaced."
By 2010, Gartner predicts that IT departments in midsized and large companies will be 30 per cent smaller than they are in 2005, and IT jobs will be influenced by four major trends. They are:
The analyst group said IT workers must focus their skills and expertise to send out a clear value message to potential employers. And employers should develop growth paths and career opportunities for these four domains of expertise.
Morello said: "IT professionals need to act now by assessing and building their business-specific, core process and industry knowledge."
Why does Gartner make such a big show of “discover...
Chris Greenslade
More business speak from middle managers..
IT s...
So Called 'Techie'
This is the sort of tosh Gartner and the other "th...
David Quinn
Yes its the end of Techie. Gartner as usual you hi...
john smith
As a 'techie' who is keenly aware of the business,...
John Woods
Work with little supervision keeping leadership appraised of project status in a timely manner raising issues of risk to the appropriate level at the ...
A truly global FMCG organisation, they are one of the world's most profitable corporations and are considered one of the best employers in Europe. ...
It should also show you have leadership and stakeholder management skills, and are adept at strategic change planning and monitoring. Focused on ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
July 10th: Just MASH Marketing: The Customer Reference Mashup
TechNet Webcast: How Microsoft Does IT: Management and Operations in Windows Server...
Mashing it up with Support: Automate, Coordinate and Collaborate with the Incident...
Ensure Virtualization is Meeting Your Needs--Read this New White Paper
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Peter Cochrane Peter Cochrane's Blog: Quality by design Why do picky people settle for poor design at work?
Naked CIO The Naked CIO: Service level disagreements SLAs - not worth the paper they're written on?