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Workforce crisis: Preparing for the coming IT crunch

Ready or not, a shortage of IT talent is coming. Here's how to prepare.

July 3, 2006 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - Like global warming, the reality of the looming talent shortage is pretty well established, but that hasn't induced many IT managers to prepare for it. Now there are no more excuses. Workforce Crisis: How to Beat the Coming Shortage of Skills and Talent (Harvard Business School Press, 2006) lays out a comprehensive plan to ensure that your IT organization -- or any organization -- continues to recruit and retain workers with the skills and commitment to move forward. Robert Morison, who wrote the book with Ken Dychtwald and Tamara J. Erickson, spoke with Kathleen Melymuka about the challenges for the coming decade.

The talent shortage is hard to get too worried about when you're not feeling the pain. When will this problem really become apparent? Any business that is already in an industry that relies on occupations in short supply knows about this. That's not computer science yet, but engineering disciplines, oil and gas, health care -- especially nursing -- public utilities, and government -- especially the federal government. I bet their IT workforce has an old profile. And to any organization that dares to take a close look at its workforce demographics and plan ahead, this will resonate.

When will it start to hit? The oldest boomers are 60, and the average retirement age is 63, so I'd say you'll be feeling pressure by 2010 and very much pressure by 2015. We may be a couple million workers shy in 2010 and 10 million shy around 2015. But you're right: In most organizations, this is still seen as an indefinitely postponable issue.

You call older workers the untapped resource. Why? Workers over 55 are the fastest-growing segment of the workforce. Workers over 55 used to be 17% or 18% of the workforce in the '50s and '60s. That segment bottomed out in the '90s at under 11%, but now it's inching up, and by 2015, it will be close to 20%. The average employer will have to rely more on workers over 55.

And there are two additional things going on with IT. One is the rather disturbing trend of the declining number of computer science undergraduate majors and graduate enrollment between 2000 and 2005. The other is that a lot of IT organizations have a generation gap. There's a group of really mature workers in leadership and a group of very young workers who have really different experience and attitudes toward the technology itself, having grown up digital.

But how will employers be able to rely more on workers over 55? Won't they be retiring? The good news is that the boomers should play a role in the brain-drain solution as well as in the problem. Seventy-five percent are on record -- repeatedly, in many surveys, including ours -- as saying that they intend to keep working at least part time in retirement. One-third of these cite financial reasons -- they haven't accumulated enough wealth and pension to retire completely. The other two-thirds say [it's] because they want to remain active.



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