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Communications skills vital for IT leaders - but hard to find

IT managers seem more convinced they have the rights skills than employers do, says research


People | 10 Jul 2009 : 

More than a third (36%) of firms still regard an IT leader's communications skills as a top priority, according to research by UK recruitment group Hays.

But the survey suggest that even though unemployment has increased the talent pool available, 58% of respondents say they are still having difficulty finding IT leaders who meet that criteria.

Hays IT managing director James Lloyd-Townshend said that businesses are increasingly looking for IT managers with strong communication skills and an ability to lead their team and business processes.

"IT professionals are increasingly aware that these skills are necessary for career advancement," he said.

However, 83% of IT leaders polled said they were either "very confident" or "reasonably confident" that their management teams were equipped with the right skills, an increase of 10% from 2008.

Senior IT professionals also seem to be looking for increased job security, with 23% saying salary was no longer as important as it was 12 months ago, down half from 2008.

Hays said the public sector was looking "increasingly desirable" to candidates, given the "many medium-to-large scale projects underway in the public sector."

Nearly half (49%) of respondents felt that an IT manager must have a blend of technical and personal skills, but nearly as many (46%) thought that someone with weaker technical skills could compensate with better than average people skills.

Lloyd-Townshend pointed out that employers are spending, "more time on training and development in this area, but ultimately the trick is finding a good mix of both."

The survey polled 122 IT leaders of public and private sector firms across the UK.


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