November 18, 2009

Will IT pros walk out the door en masse?

CIOs fear that once the recession ends, all that pent-up frustration will lead to huge losses of desirable workers

IT professionals asked to do more work for less pay and fewer benefits might be able to forgive their employers' financial choices, but industry watchers say high-tech workers won't soon forget being treated poorly during the most recent economic recession and will look to find other employment opportunities as soon as the recovery gets under way.

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Robert Half Technology this week released findings of a survey of 1,400 CIOs that showed 43 percent said retaining existing workers will be their top staffing priority in 2010. The IT staffing and consultancy firm also reported that 21 percent of CIOs polled said they would offer more training and professional development opportunities to employers in 2010.

"Employers need to focus on preventing burnout and keeping their best people engaged at work. This may be a challenge, given that staffing cuts and the reduction or elimination of benefits have left many employees feeling overworked and undervalued," said Dave Willmer, executive director at Robert Half Technology, in a statement.

Robert Half Technology suggested a few retention efforts IT employers must begin now, including training and career development programs and career advancement opportunities. CIOs should re-recruit their best employees, which essentially means they must start working to convince them to stay on board.

Other suggestions include recognizing excellence and providing project support. Robert Half Technology also suggests managers communicate regularly with staff, encourage team-building activities and promote work/life balance. Lastly, the firm says CIOs need to consider the compensation packages they offer as well as re-evaluate the workloads employees are carrying. Effort such as these will be important in reducing turnover, according to the firm.

"Companies may have to work at 're-selling' themselves to existing employees in much the same way they would when promoting themselves to prospective hires," Willmer added.

Yet it may be too late for some employees to be convinced to stay, suggests other research, which points to data collected after previous recessions and shows employees will seek other employment during the recovery. According to the September 2009 "Managing talent in a turbulent economy: Keeping your team intact" report from Deloitte Consulting, "a resume tsunami may threaten unprepared companies as key employees who held on to their jobs in tough times seek out better opportunities when economic fears recede."

Jeff Schwartz, principal of human capital at Deloitte Consulting, says there isn't much evidence to suggest that the recovery following the most recent economic recession will be any different in terms of employee turnover than previous downturns.

"There are some lessons that many in IT learned from the last recession that occurs about 12 to 24 months after the end of the recession: very critical workers leave," Schwartz says. "Companies, especially in IT, need to get ahead of the curve in terms of retention plans in the next year because it is a very reasonable bet that companies are going to see a pike in turnover after this recession."

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djdaedalus 19-Nov-09 1:35pm
Without wanting to be libelous, my experiences of Robert Half (and the experiences of others I have talked to) suggest that any utterances of theirs require a large pinch of a well-known tabletop condiment.
Regaug 19-Nov-09 11:32pm
While this report caught my interest, I find the alleged comments of these CIO's as disingenuous and generally full of baloney. While I agree that most IT workers "feel overworked and undervalued", the concept of a "very critical worker" or even a "key employee" is something that IT management has worked hard to eliminate. For years before the last recession, IT workers have been increasingly treated (and valued) as a commodity; pretty much the same way factory workers have always been treated. If IT workers walk out en masse, big deal, there are boatloads of foreign IT workers ready and waiting to replace them.
junkman 20-Nov-09 12:35pm
Are IT managers really that paranoid? Of course if you treat your best people poorly they are going to leave. Duh. Silicon Valley was not built with cheap labor - quite the opposite. If you have really good, really talented IT people who are creative, you had better learn to start paying them MORE than you think they are worth. There are always better opportunities. 10 years ago everyone in Silicon Valley knew that paying people more was the best way to retain key people. Then the dot-com boom hit and the industry was flooded with noob business managers who knew nothing about tech. They asked why are programmers being paid so much? Maybe it's because programmers have the ability to bring in $5-$20 million a piece for the company. You expect good people to bring in that kind of money and work for $70K? Keep dreaming. They will leave and go where they are rewarded and appreciated. When will Moron American Business Managers learn this lesson. You don't pay a brain surgeon or star stock broker $8/hr morons. Wake up management. If you want exceptional talent, you have to pay for it. Or you could just go bribe congress again and get the H-1B caps raised into the millions so that you can have cheap foreign labor captive who can't leave. That would solve your slave labor problems real quick, wouldn't it?

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