Good times roll for Aust IT jobs, salaries

By Iain Ferguson, ZDNet Australia
21 April 2004 04:34 PM
Tags: jobs, 2004, iain, ferguson, hub, it, skills, ict
Good times are underway for Australia's information technology workforce, with advertised information and communications technology (ICT) positions due to grow sharply for the first six months of the year.

But if you're a hardware engineer, you may want to re-skill as a security specialist.

According to the IT Skills Hub, a not-for-profit organisation formed through the cooperation of the federal government and the information technology and telecommunications (IT&T) industry, the number of advertised ICT jobs is due to grow by 25 percent for the first six months of the year over the last six months of 2003.

The Skills Hub conducted the Market Monitor survey in cooperation with Gottliebsen Research.

Areas of highest growth are security and risk management, open source software, systems integration and project management, IT Skills Hub executives said.

The anticipated increase comes on top of an 18.7 percent rise in the number of advertised positions in the last half of 2003 over the first half.

Brian Donovan, the chief executive officer of the IT Skills Hub, told ZDNet Australia   that while the improvement did not signal a return to the days of the dot-com boom, it was "certainly some reason for optimism".

The Skills Hub is also forecasting an average increase in salaries for ICT workers of 5 percent for the first six months of the year, up from 3.1 percent for the last six months of 2003. The average salary is, the Skills Hub claims, expected to reach about AU$75,000.

For contractors, hourly rates are forecast to rise by more than 3 percent, after a 1.2 percent rise in the last six months of 2003 to an average of AU$43 per hour. Prior to that, rates had slipped over the last 24 months.

Sales and marketing was the best paid ICT job family classification for the last six months of 2003, with salaries averaging AU$116,745.

Donovan said security continued to be a high priority, "both in terms of position and skill demand.

"The position of security specialist recorded one of the highest percentage increases [for the final six months of 2003] of 67 percent and one of the highest percentage increases in salary of 10.6 percent".

He attributed the growth to "re-prioritising" by organisations of their security responsibilities, driven by computer virus attacks, recent global health alerts such as SARS and instability steming from the Middle East conflict.

Information technology risk management
"We are also pleased to see a general focus on information technology risk management, which we have advocated for a year now following a survey of demand and supply for these essential skills," Donovan said.

"This will force a more urgent response from the education sector to both address the need for information technology risk management and to include security as a mandatory subject in information technology qualifications".

He said education and training sectors had to get their planning right in ICT.

"We do not want to continue the peaks and troughs of skills oversupply and shortages and therefore need to align education and planning and business planning and industry projections to get the right mix of what skills are to be needed and when - including the developments in e-risk management and e-security," the chief executive said. "It is an indictment of us that security is still an elective subject in most IT undergraduate degree programs".

Hardware engineers on the way out?
Donovan said the position of hardware engineer was "showing indications that many of its core skills were being absorbed into other roles".

The position of hardware engineer recorded the largest percentage decrease of all ICT positions for the last six months of 2003, he said. This was at a time when 73 percent of all ICT positions recorded an increase in job advertisement numbers.

Donovan also said the role of generalist technical support was "absorbing many of the skills that belong to the traditional specialised support-related positions such as operator, database administrator, network administrator and systems administrator.

"However, all these positions still performed strongly in their own right and I would see the eventual amalgamation of these positions, but much further down the track.

"You will find, in small to medium organisations, especially with employees around the 100 mark, one person would be required to perform all the attributes of these roles".

The survey found that NSW was the dominant player in Australia's ICT marketplace, with 45.8 percent of all advertised ICT jobs for the last six months of last year, followed by Victoria with 26.7 percent, the ACT with 9.2 percent and Queensland with nine percent.

Donovan also noted that one-third of all ICT job advertisement content included a reference to interpersonal skills.

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Talkback 4 comments

    I am an unemployed IT Manager ...Anonymous -- 27/04/04

    I am an unemployed IT Manager with almost 10 years experience. I was made redundant last year. I have had one short term contract position since then as an IT engineer. The rejection notices come back from agencies either within a day or my applications are not acknowledged. Today I got rejected for an IT Manager role that was identical to the role I used to have. They said they had 300 applications for the position. There are 100s of people in the same boat as me. Let the good times roll ?!?!?!

    Odd that we should be told wha ...Anonymous -- 29/05/04

    Odd that we should be told what a lucrative time it is for IT.
    The education department is advising studets not to consider a career in IT as the market is flooded with skilled unemployed people.
    I have possibly been more fortunate than some and have always maintained a steady flow of work over the years, there are many that havn't been so fortunate.
    I'm not quite sure the times are as good as we'd like but there is no doubt times are better than they were 12 months ago.

    Great to hear all this good ne ...Anonymous -- 26/07/04

    Great to hear all this good news but where all the jobs. The recruitment agencies are of no real help and may highly multi-talented professionals (like me) cannot even get reasonable positions.

    I have well over 12 years senior position experience, but.....

    For all of us "oldies&quo ...Anonymous -- 08/04/05

    For all of us "oldies" with training and experience in the late 70's and through the 1980's, the current job market is bleak indeed.
    So you trained on COBOL, ****embler, Systems Design and Systems Analysis, Computer Architecture and Database at the the then Mecca of Computing, the Caulfield Institute Of Technology, and graduated with a Graduate Diploma in Data Processing. Better still, you had Dr Trevor Pearcey for a lecturer? Too bad, ladies and gentlemen, our day is done.
    Apart from trying to get a job, which is absolutely impossible, you have to maintain a work/life/learning balance.
    The basic problem is that to get a job, you have to be in current employment, where you have acquired all your current and relevant skills.
    In the age of clockless processors, the eight core cell processor, and in Japan, the artificial
    intelligence based robots like ASIMO see http://asimo.honda.com we ageing decrepit folks are doomed to obsolescence. An artificial intelligence based business analyst software system, to replace human business analysts is an inevitable future, if not current, development. The same applies for all ICT roles.
    Come to think of it, automated statutory certification systems will soon be rolling out, one day, to provide legally binding statutory roles in the fields of law and accounting.

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