Despite the recent lackluster employment figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there's cause for optimism on the IT hiring front, according to Dice.com. In a poll of 800 IT-focused hiring managers and recruiters, the tech jobs site found 73 percent plan to increase hiring in the second half of the year compared to the first six months of 2012.
More IT hiring managers and recruiters are optimistic about hiring than six months ago, when 65 percent said they planned to increase hiring.
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Respondents are divided on the issue of finding technical talent, however. Roughly one-quarter (24 percent) said the time it takes to fill positions has shortened compared to last year, while 45 percent reported extended hiring times, due in part to an inability to find qualified professionals. The remainder -- 31 percent -- said the time to fill open positions is unchanged relative to 2011.
On the salary front, 58 percent of corporate hiring managers said salaries for existing IT staff are higher than they were last year. Dice.com also asked corporate hiring managers about attrition rates. Nearly two-thirds (63 percent) said voluntary departures have not increased, while 37 percent said they have.
"Our customers tell us it's hard to entice tech professionals out of their current positions," said Tom Silver, Dice's senior vice president, North America, in a statement. "There is just not enough confidence for professionals to leave what they know behind and take a chance with their careers."
Tech professionals of all experience levels are in demand, though hiring managers and recruiters reported different search priorities. Companies recruiting for their own needs are most likely to focus on tech professionals with two to five years in the workforce, slightly edging out those with six to 10 years of experience, Dice.com reports. Recruiters and staffing companies, meanwhile, tend to be searching for more experienced professionals with six to 10 years of tenure.
Dice's relatively positive IT hiring forecast comes on the heels of a disappointing U.S. jobs report last week. The Labor Department's BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics) reported on June 1 that the unemployment rate rose from 8.1 percent to 8.2 percent in May and the number of new jobs created was only 69,000 -- the worst month for job creation in a year.







