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Forrester predicts IT's credit-crunch survivors

Tim Ferguson silicon.com

Published: 30 Sep 2008 09:39 BST

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The economic downturn will see an increase in demand for technology professionals specialising in IT architecture, as businesses consolidate their operations, according to Forrester.

According to the analyst house, as organisations look at reducing costs through mergers and acquisitions, skills around data, applications and process integration will be increasingly in demand.

Forrester analyst and author of a report examining IT's most in-demand roles, Marc Cecere, told ZDNet.co.uk sister site silicon.com: "For the economic problems that we're going through right now, there are probably some roles that tend to be helped by this… Those are going to be those around architecture because there's going to be a lot of data integration [and] application integration, especially process integrations."

He added: "I think you're going to get a lot greater interest in the enterprise version of these architects."

Cecere explained that companies may look at becoming more global to combat the economic downturn, leading to increased demand for enterprise project managers, IT transformation specialists and process experts.

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In addition, the Forrester vice president said enterprise vendor managers could be in more demand as companies look to cut costs through better-value technology deals and outsourcing.

But Cecere said this consolidation activity will put operational and infrastructure roles at risk, as they can easily be duplicated within organisations. "Within those groups, there'll be highly specialised areas which will still be in demand for a long time," he added.

These could include specialist skills in storage, software reuse (as part of service-oriented architectures) and mobile and wireless devices.

Other effects of the credit crunch on the IT industry are expected to include longer hardware-refresh cycles, increased use of software as a service, and a reduction in available contracting roles.

Credit: Revealed: Which IT jobs will survive the credit crunch from silicon.com

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