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Thriving tech sector needs 140,000 recruits a year

Natasha Lomas silicon.com

Published: 30 Jan 2008 08:54 GMT

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The good news is the UK's IT and telecoms sector is thriving. The bad news is 140,000 recruits are likely to be needed annually to satisfy the industry's demand for increasingly skilled staff.

That's according to research from industry skills body e-skills UK, which noted that computing student numbers in the UK are falling — down by 50 percent in the last five years. Meanwhile, the number of women in the sector is falling — down to just one in five workers.

E-skills UK predicts just 19 percent of the sector's new recruits will come direct from education. More than half will be experienced workers transferring in from other occupations, and this puts fresh focus on training, it said.

Karen Price, chief executive of e-skills UK, said that, as some IT activities move out of the country to lower-cost nations, the UK's IT and telecoms sector must look to other industries to plug its skills gap by "reskilling" and "upskilling" workers.

Price said in a statement: "The forecasts for continued industry growth uncovered by our research are very encouraging. But, beneath these forecasts, lies a complex picture of restructuring and skills shift."

Paul Coby, chief information officer of British Airways and chair of the e-skills UK CIO Board, said business and technology skills training must improve "at all levels".

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Coby said in a statement: "This means producing not just highly skilled IT professionals but business and public leaders who are IT savvy, and a workforce across all industries that is trained and able to use technology."

The research, entitled IT & Telecoms Insights 2008, predicts the majority of employment growth for jobs in the sector will be in IT management, IT strategy and software, especially project management, systems architecture, business process, change management, security and risk management.

Customer and business-oriented skills will also be in increased demand, along with advanced technical capability.

Around a fifth (22 percent) of companies in the sector looking to recruit staff said they are finding it difficult to attract applicants with the right skills, the research found.

E-skills UK's Price added: "The importance of IT and telecoms to the UK means that skills gaps and shortages have a huge knock-on effect for the rest of the economy."

Credit: Thousands of tech newbies needed to plug skills gap from silicon.com

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