Coonan to launch new IT society

Come October 24, technology professionals will have the opportunity to join IT Pro Australia, an organisation established by powerful US-based lobby group, CompTIA (Computer Technology Industry Association).

The society aims to build its membership by attracting people with vendor-based certifications, and is backed by a steering committee of industry heavyweights such as Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, Sun and Hewlett-Packard.

Its main role, said CompTIA regional director Danika Bakalich, will be to help companies in the IT industry improve the qualifications and skills of their employees.

"Minister Coonan has agreed to launch IT Pro [and] we are really excited. We have been enthused with her interest in the industry .... She has redefined the goalposts as to what it means to be in the [IT] industry," Bakalich told ZDNet Australia .

"We have been working for almost a year to build a framework for this association. How can we, as an industry group, strengthen and better communicate the value of well-educated and qualified professionals in the market?

"The whole point is to get people into the [IT] industry and keep them in.

"Members of IT Pro will have instant access to all vendor-based training programmes along with the ability to network with other members," Bakalich said.

Yearly membership is $85, but $25 for students. The organisation will immediately have access to thousands of IT professionals in the country, including 5,000 from Qantas and Telstra's 1,500.

According to Bakalich, a soft launch of IT Pro will kickoff in mid-August when a Web site offering memberships to the fledgling body goes live.

"We are starting off with an e-association focussing on building communities and within six months of launching we will be holding forums -- some of which have already started -- around the country to bring individuals and professionals together for networking opportunities," said Bakalich.

Filling a gap
IT Pro should not be compared with other organisations such as the Australian Computer Society because of its sole focus on a vendor-qualified participation, as opposed to academic graduates.

A university degree is not the benchmark for membership, Bakalich said. "We cover everyone from kids at school doing a Cisco academic programme, to coders and architects -- but with a focus on industry qualifications and skills."

She said IT Pro will work closely with the ACS. Both parties are looking at endorsing each others' membership programmes, she added.

CompTIA has been operational in Australia for three years, and despite the fact it is an influential lobby group in the US, Bakalich said: "We are not a lobbying body in Australia at all. We have been referred to as that in the past but it has been incorrect. We represent the industry so if the industry wants us to make comments to any particular body then we will if it is appropriate."

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Talkback 6 comments

    It is unfortunate that the government's lack of support for the IT industry in Australia, caused the closure of the organisation Software Engineering Australia both at the federal and at the state levels. SEA and SEAWA had provided professional Anonymous -- 14/07/05

    It is unfortunate that the government's lack of support for the IT industry in Australia, caused the closure of the organisation Software Engineering Australia both at the federal and at the state levels.

    SEA and SEAWA had provided professional development and networking for software development professionals, an industry that lacked, and lacks, government support.

    But then, as part of the government's sellout to the USA, I suppose that it is not surprising that the government caused the Australian organisations - SEA and its state-based affiliates, to shut down through lack of government support, and replaced them with a government-supported branch of a USA commercial organisation.

    We are, after all, according to the federal government policy, the fifty-whatevereth state of the USA, and unable to stand on our own, as an independent country, with our own industries.

    It is sad that Comptia can't even get a simple web site up and running on the URL they provided. If this is the level of technical acumen that the group represents, then who is going to pay money to join them?!?Anonymous -- 15/07/05

    It is sad that Comptia can't even get a simple web site up and running on the URL they provided. If this is the level of technical acumen that the group represents, then who is going to pay money to join them?!?

    Since when does vendor certificates qualify an Admin monkey as an 'IT Professional'? Other professions demand the possession of a Bachelor's degree or equivalent qualification before the use of the term 'Professional' is allowed. Incidentally, ACS adherAnonymous -- 15/07/05

    Since when does vendor certificates qualify an Admin monkey as an 'IT Professional'? Other professions demand the possession of a Bachelor's degree or equivalent qualification before the use of the term 'Professional' is allowed. Incidentally, ACS adheres to this strict definition along with all other true professional societies.

    ACS should wake upArthur Fatt -- 17/08/05 (in reply to #120119203)

    Bachelors degree's aren't worth any more than vendor certificates. You can get either without having any idea how to implement what you have learned by rote.
    I have worked with many graduates and vendor certified types who are equally useless, if not dangerous.

    A proven track record is the only thing I look at.

    The ACS is a joke.
    Come on, all they really want is money for testing people who apply for visas.
    What have they ever done of the IT Industry in Astralia? Besides supplying a closed shop for a few old good ole boys.

    "Wake up" The industry is moving on..Derek L Kerr -- 20/10/05 (in reply to #120119203)

    Try doing a Windows Server 2003 MCSE today. Academics agree it’s harder to do than a degree due to the experience factor. Also take a look at what Charles Sturt University is doing where by they join vendor certifications with University modules and create an IT Masters based on vendor tracks, effectively turning out industry ready graduates. It’s easy to rest on your laurels and call certified people admin monkeys. Unfortunately the number of young people signing up for an IT degree is in decline as the content does not lead to an immediate job. They often have to get certified afterwards. I am a member of the ACS also and would like to point out that its membership is in decline, basically because of the way in which aging academics view the landscape. The industry is moving on…… How come the so called “Professionals” have not come to the rescue ? Congratulation to ItPro Austrlia ra ra.

    Government shutting down Australian Software Development. The Australian federal government's shift in support, from software development (through cancelled support for SEA and SEAWA) to two-bit helpdesk staff (comptia and its limited admin certAnonymous -- 19/07/05

    Government shutting down Australian Software Development.

    The Australian federal government's shift in support, from software development (through cancelled support for SEA and SEAWA) to two-bit helpdesk staff (comptia and its limited admin certificates), shows that the federal government intends to shut down the Australian Software Development Industry, and eliminate Australian computing professionals, instead having only two-bit helpdesk staff with qualifications at the level of inferior tafe certificates from an overseas institution that is not even an accredited government vocational education institution.

    But then, given that the policy of the federal government, is to reduce training and development of professionals in Australia, and the running down of the universities, it is not really surprising that the federal government wants to restrict training and education, to secondary school level.

    ...................................................

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