IT Consulting, Contracting Jobs Will Continue to Grow in 2010
eWEEK talks to industry trade group TechServe Alliance to get a sense for how 2009 ended up for technology jobs, and where tech jobs are headed in 2010. There is demand for business analysts, business intelligence experts, ERP experts and .NET developers.
The second half of 2009 saw stronger stabilization of technology jobs compared with the first half, according to industry group TechServe Alliance in a report released Jan. 8. IT employment increased by 6,400 jobs in December for a total of 3,821,000—an improvement of 0.2 percent, according to TechServe. TechServe Alliance, formerly known as the National Association of Computer Consultant Businesses, is a 500-member trade organization based in Alexandria, Va.
While layoffs were the largest trend in technology and nearly every industry, 2009 was a decent year for technology consultants, contractors and professional services organizations, which saw some of the only gains in employment.
“The most robust job segment, Management and Technical Consulting Services, has gained a net 13,600 jobs in the first 11 months of 2009, with net job gains in four of the last five months,” said technology analyst company Foote Partners in a December report. (PDF)
TechServe bases its information on statistics drawn from the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics and looks at staffing patterns in a “dozen IT and computer-related occupations in 16 industries and industry sectors,” the report said. eWEEK interviewed TechServe Alliance President Steven Norris, who works for EdgeTech Consulting, to discuss hiring patterns and job trends in 2009 and 2010. The following is a quick question-and-answer session with Norris:
Was there a hiring trend for 2009?
We are seeing more and more clients asking for temporary IT resources as they begin to seek the talent to complete their IT initiatives that have been on hold for perhaps a year or more. We also are seeing that whereas a couple of years ago they would only interview two or three of their top candidates in their labor pool, now with so many Read more…
