Ross Bentley and
Bill GoodwinDemand for skilled IT professionals has fallen to its lowest
level since 1995, killing hopes of any quick recovery in the jobs
market.
The number of IT jobs advertised in the second quarter this year
has fallen to little over 25,000, down by almost half from the same
time last year.
The downturn, the sixth consecutive quarterly fall in
recruitment activity, highlights growing pressure on IT departments
to invest in cost cutting projects.
But the figures, revealed exclusively in the latest Computer
Weekly/SSP salary trends survey, mask a rapidly escalating shortage
of staff with e-commerce skills.
Demand for traditional mainframe and client server skills has
fallen dramatically with the number of advertisements for Unix
dropping 48%, Oracle by 64% and Windows NT by 61%, compared to the
same time last year.
Yet demand for internet skills, particularly, Java is reaching
record levels, with the number of Java jobs advertised rising by
70% from 2,410 in the 2nd quarter last year, to 4,088 this
year.
The growing popularity of Java reflects the move by many users
towards Java-dependent packaged software. Software houses accounted
for two-thirds of Java jobs advertised, the survey reveals.
Demand for staff with e-commerce skills and a background in
client-server is particularly acute, the survey reveals.
With internet skills predicted to be in increasingly short
supply, hopes for a rapid recovery in the jobs market look
increasingly unlikely, said Philip Virgo strategic advisor to the
Institute for the Management of Information Systems.
"E-commerce can't grow quickly enough because the skills don't
exist to grow it quickly. Though overall recruitment is falling,
lack of e-commerce skills is a constraint to recovery," he
said.
The e-commerce skills shortage has prompted some firms to offer
bounties to find them Java programmers.
"Requirements for Java and e-commerce have picked up
considerably," said Dave Pinto, contracts director at IT
recruitment specialist Computer People.
Java specialists with experience in C++ and business analysis
are commanding the highest rates but demand for Java specialists
with Visual Basic skills is also strong.
Although the Computer Weekly/SSP survey does not take into
account Web advertising, it is an accurate reflection of the
relative demand for IT skills. A survey by Cranfield School of
Management reveals that 60% of companies are unwilling to use the
Web for recruitment.
Full report
Mark Smith, general manager at City IT recruitment firm Knight
Munro, said that only three skills are hot at the moment: "Java,
Java, Java."
E-commerce company, Entranet, is offering to pay a £50,000
reward to secure a team of 10 Java specialists.Traditional IT
skills, including Novell, RRG/400, SAP, Lotus Notes, MVS and DB2
have been pushed out of the top twenty-five in the past 12 months
to make way for CML, Cobra, WAP and Solaris.
Winners and losers - salaries offered
| JOB TITLE | Q2 2000 | Q2 1999 | CHANGE |
| Network support
technician | £23,219 | £20,892 | +11% |
| Software
engineer | £29,701 | £27,862 | +7% |
| IT Manager | £56,970 | £54,039 | +5% |
| Programmer | £24,087 | £23,212 | +4% |
| Operator | £21,946 | £21,112 | +4% |
| Systems
developer | £32,300 | £31,349 | +3% |
| Analyst/programmer | £27,666 | £26,913 | +3% |
| Systems
analyst | £28,601 | £28,247 | +1% |
| Management
Consultant | £70,723 | £72,485 | -2% |
| PC support
analyst | £21,993 | £23,368 | -6% |