Scepticism about the effectiveness of IT, increasing automation and offshoring will lead to the emergence of a new breed of IT professionals who combine technical aptitude, local knowledge, knowledge of industry processes and leadership ability, according to analyst Gartner.
Diane Morello, vice president of research at Gartner, said in a statement: "Some will be bolstered, some will be carved up, some will be redistributed and some will be displaced."
By 2010, Gartner predicts that IT departments in midsized and large companies will be 30 percent smaller than they are in 2005, and IT jobs will be influenced by four major trends. They are:
Jobs in technology infrastructure and services will decline in end-user organisations but grow in service, hardware and software companies but many of these jobs will be in developing economies.
Business intelligence, online consumer services and collaboration will grow in user companies, systems integrators and consulting companies.
There will be opportunities in process design and management in terms of competitive business processes, design of process automation and operational processes.
Relationship and sourcing management will gain ground, demanding strengths in managing "intangibles" and managing geographically distributed parties with different work outcomes and cultures.
The analyst group said IT workers must focus their skills and expertise to send out a clear value message to potential employers. And employers should develop growth paths and career opportunities for these four domains of expertise.
Morello said: "IT professionals need to act now by assessing and building their business-specific, core process and industry knowledge."









