Tech job market beats off credit crunch

Pah! Who needs job security?

By Neil Vowles, 7 August 2008 16:52

NEWS

The IT jobs market is resisting the pressures of the looming recession as employment opportunities remain stable, figures from a recruitment firm suggest.

IT testing roles saw an 8.3 per cent increase in the year's second quarter and developer positions also increased slightly, according to recruitment company The IT JobBoard.

Jobs in support and programming also remained stable with only development and management roles seeing a small decline over the year, although the recruiter said senior roles will rise again in the autumn.

But the big winners could be those seeking employment in investment banking and hedge funds with available positions rising by 50 per cent in the second quarter.

Adam Stokes, operations manager at The IT JobBoard, said: "The good news is that we are seeing stability across IT positions as a whole, with no further significant drops since the beginning of the year - in fact an increase in networking positions is a positive sign that infrastructure projects are still going ahead."

Results of a separate survey also seem to indicate that the IT market is remaining bullish despite the credit crunch.

The latest survey from IT recruiters Computer People found that only 62 per cent of IT professionals polled considered job security as an important factor when looking for work.

Nick Dettmar, Computer People managing director, said the results were surprising especially in the current employment climate.

Dettmar said: "Having some sense of job stability was often at the forefront of an employee's job-hunting criteria so these results perhaps indicate a change of values."

The 5,000 IT workers polled placed greater importance on having a role that was challenging and with adequate resources, which Computer People claims indicates individuals are demanding more from potential employers.

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Comments

There are 4 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Mikal Dunne

    Don't know where the figures came from about Support freelancing but I think they are very wrong. Support vacancies are way down in the South East and the hourly rates have fallen through the floor making the few vacancies not worth considering since freelancer costs cannot be met.

  2. 2. anonymous

    Give it time.
    If we haven't seen the effects of the CC on IT already, we will soon.

  3. 3. Simon Allen

    I agree that it is 'early days'.

    We will see contracts not renewed and projects deferred. There might not be a big cut back but a slow reduction will soon be evident.

    This recession has a long way to go and even when it is over, IT will not be the first to bounce back.

    Some of us remember what happened in 1989/92.

  4. 4. Frank

    Availability of resources / a doable challenge is only above job security as a desire because first we want to be able to do the job we have been asked to do! And if we can be seen to be doing the job then that helps with job security. But with outsourceing and shambolic management it is getting harder.

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