annum salaries
Web 2.0 sends web developer pay skyrocketing
News Web developers with Java skills can demand £35,000 per annum, while those with Enterprise Java Beans knowledge can ask as much as £50,000, the report claims. It said annual salaries for IT professionals skilled in key web technologies (Java... [15 Dec 2006]
Skills Survey 2006: IT salaries dip
News And about 25 per cent fewer claim per-annum salaries of more than £70,000 compared to 2005. IT workers are bringing home lower average salaries than in 2005. At the same time, fewer are earning the higher salaries. [18 May 2006]
City IT pay rates top £1,000 per day
News According to figures from the Association of Technology Staffing Companies (ATSCo), contractors in the City earn between £50 and £59 per hour - roughly £50,500 per annum, at an average rate of employment through a year. [21 Feb 2006]
Life looking good for IT contractors
Comment This compares with silicon.com's 2005 Skills Survey, which showed salaries for IT contractors and consultants has remained steady over the past year, with about half of respondents making between £55,000 and £110,000 per annum. [12 May 2005]
Techies wanted in the public sector
News Software developers with SQL skills - the most highly sought - can earn an average of £27,081 per annum, according to average advertised salaries. Second in demand were Office experts who can make £36,000 per annum, followed by Oracle workers who... [03 Mar 2005]
Public sector IT demand on the up
Software developers with SQL skills -- the most highly sought -- can earn an average of £27,081 per annum, according to average advertised salaries. Second in demand were Office experts who can make £36,000 per annum, followed by Oracle workers who... [02 Mar 2005]
Offshoring call centres to India risks UK customer backlash
News The latest figures from ContactBabel actually put average starting salaries for Indian call centre agents at around £1,500 - their UK equivalents start on an average of £13,000 per annum. There is a less of a difference at managerial level - £5,000... [03 Dec 2003]
The Ovum View: Holway on the IT salary dilemma
Comment Future growth will be quite closely aligned to GDP growth which means mainly in the 0-5 per cent per annum range. While silicon.com has been running the results of its annual skills survey, Ovum analyst supremo Richard Holway has separately been... [08 Apr 2003]
