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Skills Survey 2007: Staffing crisis deepens
'Wanted: Techies... '
By Natasha Lomas
Published: Tuesday 07 August 2007
The IT skills crisis is deepening, according to exclusive silicon.com research.
The ninth annual Skills Survey reveals employers are finding it increasingly difficult to fill IT positions in their organisations.
Half (48 per cent) of survey respondents agreed or strongly agreed there is a skills crisis. And 45 per cent said there are IT jobs in their business they are unable to fill.
This compares to 37 per cent suffering staffing issues last year - and 34 per cent in 2005. Just 14 per cent had problems recruiting back in 2003.
Despite recruitment difficulties caused by the skills shortage, fewer survey respondents than last year feel driven to consider software as a service (SaaS) as a means of plugging the gap - just 23 per cent said they have considered using SaaS, down two percentage points on last year.
For the fifth year running, programming languages such as Java, C variants, HTML and XML are in shortest supply in the workplace, followed by web services, SOA skills such as J2EE and .NET, and then IT management skills (around systems, storage and networks) and database expertise.
Project management is also unchanged as the non-IT skill in shortest supply in the workplace, with leadership skills also proving difficult to locate, as in previous years.
When it comes to the perennial question of whether business or technical skills are most important to succeeding in the IT industry, the majority of respondents to the 2007 Skills Survey hedged their bets. More than half (62 per cent) said it is important to have both business and technical skills.
Asked directly if business skills are key, 67 per cent agreed or strongly agreed that they are - although this figure is down on 2006's result, when 83 per cent said business skills were key.
Just 18 per cent of respondents to this year's Skills Survey think technical skills are the most important to IT success.
The results are based on responses from 721 individuals, most of whom reside in the UK.
We will be bringing you more results from the silicon.com 2007 Skills Survey over the coming days and weeks.
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