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IT Careers

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Title: IT Careers


1
IT Careers
  • Presented By Mr. Spiros Velianitis

2
Discussion Topics
  • Why Discuss IT Careers?
  • What are the NWCET Information Technology Skill
    Standards?
  • Career Clusters
  • Possible Factors Restraining IT Hiring
  • The Outsourcing Constraint
  • The Visa Parameter
  • IT Workforce 2004 Overall Trends
  • Declining Employment in the IT Industry
  • High Demand for Computer Occupations Till 2012
  • What is Hot?
  • IT Salaries are on the Rise
  • How Much Am I Going to Make?
  • How About Entry Level?
  • Stay Current and Add Value
  • Pay Attention to Soft Skills
  • Where To Learn About Job Openings
  • 100 Best Places to Work in IT

3
Why Discuss IT Careers?
  • Competitive pressure is an issue for employees
    and employers alike. To be successful IT workers
    must make themselves as valuable as possible to
    hiring companies. They must also make themselves
    the stewards of their own careers. Understanding
    the trends and directions shaping the IT
    workforce is one of the best ways to launch or
    sustain an information technology career.
  • If the U.S. is to remain a leader in information
    technology, IT workers must remain at the
    vanguard of their profession. IT workers must be
    the best to build the best. That means education,
    training and professional development.
  • For individual workers, it means developing a
    career strategy that puts one in the best
    possible position for success.
  • Becoming appropriately skilled and maintaining a
    finely tuned competitive edge will be
    increasingly important for IT workers and IT
    companies alike.
  • Source Information Technology Association of
    America Annual Workforce Development Survey,
    September 2004

4
What are the NWCET Information Technology Skill
Standards?
  • The standards enumerate technical skills,
    employability skills, and foundation knowledge
    requirements for eight IT career clusters. Career
    clusters are groupings of representative job
    titles, related by a close association with a
    common set of technical skills, knowledge, and
    abilities. The career cluster approach was used
    because it more closely reflects how work is
    organized today, especially in illustrating
    mobility and progression among representative job
    titles.
  • National Workforce Center for Emerging
    Technologies (NWCET) is a National Science
    Foundation funded Advanced Technological
    Education IT Center
  • More information on NWCET can be found on the
    Center's Website at http//www.nwcet.org

5
Career Clusters
  • Database Development and Administration
  • Digital Media
  • Enterprise Systems Analysis and Integration
  • Network Design and Administration
  • Programming/Software Engineering
  • Technical Support
  • Technical Writing
  • Web Development and Administration

6
Database Development and Administration
  • Knowledge allows companies to make sound business
    decisions and operate at peak performance. The
    inability to turn data into meaningful
    information differentiates companies and can
    allow the potential of company investments in IT
    to go unrealized.
  • Database developers and administrators help
    companies reap maximum benefits by mining legacy
    systems for maximum productivity gains, building
    customer relationship management solutions, and
    turning supply chains into value chains. They do
    this by creating structures, tools, forms, and
    reports necessary to make data from core
    operations and remote field offices both readable
    and usable.
  • Work here includes needs analysis, database
    design and modeling, user interface development,
    object creation and related implementation
    activity monitoring, testing and maintenance.
    Building, testing and maintaining dynamic,
    compliant databases helps to get the most out of
    companies information resources.
  • Database developers work on the most mission
    critical of corporate information systems, legacy
    systems that provide long term continuity and
    seamless customer support, or the next generation
    of peer-to-peer or data mining applications.
  • Security knowledge is a critical skill in this
    job category, where volumes of customer,
    financial or sensitive data must be kept free
    from intrusion, attack or theft.

7
Digital Media
  • Digital media experts put computers and software
    through their paces to create animations, movies,
    games and more.
  • These professionals convert bits of data into
    compelling graphics, text, sound and animation.
  • Digital designers must understand customer
    requirements and expectations, translate these
    into prototypes and simulations, build scripts
    and content elements, refine outcomes, test
    results and document how it was all done.

8
Enterprise Systems Analysis and Integration
  • Enterprise Systems Integration professionals put
    the pieces of a large-scale solution together,
    often from unrelated products, services and
    systems. The result must be a cohesive and
    productive whole.
  • These behind the scenes technical gurus
    orchestrate the interaction of numerous
    technologies to create comprehensive, secure
    customer solutions.
  • Systems integrators must be adept at analyzing
    what can be enterprise-wide requirements and
    innovative business models, assessing strengths
    and weaknesses of commercial off-the-shelf
    products, performing cost benefit analyses and
    developing technology modernization plans,
    managing large-scale programs, interacting with
    customers, and much more.

9
Network Design and Administration
  • Network design and administration professionals
    help companies and organizations move different
    types of communications traffic through the
    Internet, intranets, extranets, local and wide
    area networks, the public switched network and
    more.
  • Integration is becoming increasingly key, because
    cross-platform convergence is becoming
    increasingly common.
  • Network design and administration professional
    skills include requirements analysis network
    design process, protocol and hardware planning
    and integration performance evaluation and load
    balancing information security plan development
    and implementation system monitoring and
    reporting and on-going maintenance to keep all
    of the trains running on time.
  • In the age of increasing network threats and
    cyber terrorism, network administrators must have
    unparalleled knowledge of the latest information
    security features, products and services.

10
Programming/Software Engineering
  • If software is music, computer programmers and
    software engineers are composers.
  • Programmers must determine how a given computer
    system or application performs in the overall
    environment. And they must make sure that there
    are no sour notes.
  • Programmers develop information architectures to
    understand how a system should perform identify
    customer requirements translate those needs into
    system capabilities and functionality write
    computer code test and re-test for security
    defects, bugs and vulnerabilities, and finally
    upgrade the products as new needs are determined
    by customers.

11
Technical Support
  • Technical support personnel work with customers
    to diagnose and correct system errors or failures
    and to install and upgrade new equipment and
    software
  • Perform at a call center or help desk and answer
    questions from users
  • Work with sales teams to provide technical
    guidance and consultation
  • Perform systems operation and maintenance
  • Supporting users is the name of the game. Tech
    support pros must be able to troubleshoot
    analyze requirements facilitate remedial action
    and customer service
  • Install and configure new systems perform
    systems monitoring optimization and diagnostics
    test and retest
  • Develop documentation.

12
Technical Writing
  • From the first word on user requirements to the
    last word on how the system works, technical
    writers document, explain, translate and
    interpret technical speak into plain language.
  • Technical writing output includes user and
    maintenance manuals, training documents and
    packaging materials for software and other
    products.
  • Tech writers also produce highly technical
    documents for administrators, designers,
    developers and programmers.

13
Web Development and Administration
  • Behind each online sale, catalog web site,
    electronic procurement or e-commerce portal is a
    web developer or team of developers and
    administrators. These professionals help firms to
    offer their products and services through
    dynamic, secure and navigable sites that create a
    complete, efficient customer experience. The goal
    is to deliver complex content, safe transactions
    and back-end supply chain management, all
    combined to sustain a buyers confidence.
  • Web developers must deliver these elements via a
    crisp layout and attractive design for clients
    and often constantly re-tool sites to make room
    for new or changed web content. Companies want to
    access their back office applications and data
    with web capabilities, extend customer resource
    management functionality, achieve better
    operational efficiency through intranet
    applications, and gain competitive advantage
    through tighter extranet integration with key
    suppliers and subcontractors.
  • Web developers can begin their careers by
    building pages and work to deliver the most
    strategic offerings of the enterprise.

14
Possible Factors Restraining IT Hiring
  • The intention of larger employers to shift some
    of their work overseas
  • Increases in productivity enabling companies to
    take a more stringent approach to their hiring
    plans
  • The possibility that companies have adequate
    staff resources for current business needs
  • The rising cost of health insurance is curtailing
    the hiring plans of companies, particularly small
    firms that cumulatively hire the most IT workers
  • Companies may be substituting incremental
    improvements in IT capability for the kind of
    more sweeping strategic approaches taken in the
    1990s
  • A soft economic recovery may be prompting
    companies to make greater use of temporary and
    part-time workers rather than fill slots with
    permanent hirers.

15
The Outsourcing Constraint
  • In March 2004, ITAA published a study prepared by
    econometric modeling firm Global Insight. That
    study found that, since 2000, approximately
    100,000 computer software and services jobs have
    moved offshore.
  • That study found that global sourcing will have
    an array of positive benefits for the U.S.
    economy, including a net gain in jobs, better
    average real wages for American workers, lower
    inflation, higher business investment, and
    improved GDP.
  • The study also found while the economy will
    produce over 500,000 new IT jobs between 2003 and
    2008, approximately one out of every two of these
    jobs will be located offshore.

16
Jobs Most Resistant to Outsourcing in 2005
  • Architects (network, data, Internet/intranet
    storage)
  • Integrators
  • Security (auditing, forensics, management)
  • Enterprise data management, data modelers
  • Business analysts, business technologists
  • Project managers/leaders
  • Process modelers
  • Network managers
  • CRM professionals
  • Source "IT Insider Compensation Benchmarks and
    Employment Trends," third quarter, 2004 Foote
    Partners LLC, New Canaan, Conn.

17
The Visa Parameter
  • NOVEMBER 22, 2004 (COMPUTERWORLD) - WASHINGTON --
    Responding to pressure from high-tech businesses
    and industry groups, Congress this weekend
    approved an increase in the number of H-1B visas
    by 20,000 but limited it to specially qualified
    students. The legislation, included in the
    omnibus budget bill, allows foreign national
    master's and Ph.D. graduates of U.S. universities
    to apply for an H-1B visa, according to people
    familiar with the bill.
  • The H-1B visa, which is heavily used by high-tech
    employers, allows skilled foreign workers to get
    jobs in the U.S. for up to six years.
  • The number of H-1B visas was set at 195,000 for
    fiscal years 2001, 2002 and 2003 before dropping
    to 65,000 in fiscal 2004

18
IT Workforce 2004 Overall Trends
  • The U.S. IT workforce gained population in the
    last year, moving up two percent from 10,312,650
    in 2003 to 10,526,289 in 2004. The increase
    continues the recovery in IT workforce size, a
    recovery made necessary only by the 2001
    recession and contraction of dot.com and telecom
    companies. Figure 1 provides a glimpse at the
    year-to-year variation in workforce size. Table 2
    shows the headcount for the eight career clusters
    (category).

19
Declining Employment in the IT Industry
  • Thought the IT workforce reached an all time high
    last year, the IT industry nationwide saw a
    declining workforce (Figure below).

20
High Demand for Computer Occupations Till 2012
  • Among all occupations in the economy, computer
    and healthcare occupations are expected to grow
    the fastest over the projection period (chart 7).
    In fact, healthcare occupations make up 10 of the
    20 fastest growing occupations, while computer
    occupations account for 5 out of the 20 fastest
    growing occupations in the economy.
  • Source Tomorrows Jobs Occupational Outlook
    Handbook 2004-05 Edition. US Department of
    Labor-Bureau of Labor Statistics

21
What is Hot?
Source IT Hiring inches upward. NetwokWorld,
1/24/05
22
IT Salaries are on the Rise
23
How Much Am I Going to Make?
24
How About Entry Level?
25
Stay Current and Add Value
  • As an IT worker interested in moving your career
    forward, consider gaining both up-to-date
    technical skills but also learn to step back and
    see the organizations bigger business picture.
  • Hiring managers see a range of activity as
    helpful background in acquiring an IT job. Table
    13 shows that while engineering is most highly
    ranked, communications is also considered
    important, as is education.

26
Pay Attention to Soft Skills
  • Soft skills round out the technical worker and
    give the individual a sharper competitive
    advantage. Soft skills could be writing a memo,
    developing a plan, organizing a meeting or
    managing a project. While building a solid
    technical background, some may overlook the
    importance of soft skills to a well-rounded
    career.
  • IT employers say its the soft skills and not
    the software skills that give job seekers the
    edge Sacramento Bee May 23, 2004
  • We dont have people who just sit in a corner
    and code Steve Scott, Vision Service Plan

27
CIO Interview
28
Where To Learn About Job Openings
Source Tomorrows Jobs Occupational Outlook
Handbook 2004-05 Edition. US Department of
Labor-Bureau of Labor Statistics
  • Some Useful Employment Links
  • MISA http//www.sacmisa.org/misa Personal
    contacts
  • CSUS Career Center http//www.csus.edu/careercent
    er/home.htm School career planning and placement
    offices
  • CBA Student Affairs http//www.csus.edu/cba/stude
    ntaffairs/job_career/index.html School career
    planning and placement offices
  • Sacramento Bee http//www.sacbee.com/classads/emp
    loyment/ Classified ads
  • Dice.com http//www.dice.com/ Internet networks
    and resources
  • State Jobs http//www.spb.ca.gov/ State
    employment service offices
  • Federal Jobs http//www.usajobs.opm.gov/
    Federal Government

29
100 Best Places to Work in ITComputerworld
6/14/2004
30
Presentation resources Information Technology
Association of America Annual Workforce
Development Survey, September 2004 (unless
otherwise noted)
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