> Hi Carol and Andrej

Hello Sue,

WARNING: this is a relatively long and relatively personally flavored rambling, you 
might want to skip it if you don't
like this sort of thing...or are short on time... or dislike ramblings :-)

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: (gotta have one) Lack of established and open job market is hurting 
everyone in Canterbury IT
industry equally. Employers, recruiters and job seekers should get together to create 
IT job market.

(See? I did not mention government, not once!)

> I talked to a guy like this this week but he'd only been here 8 weeks. I
> suggested he contact you guys via the CS website/forum, also Michael Miller.
> I also said much the same as Andrej (but without your great numbers).  It
> seems people advertise when there's a statutory need to do so or the company
> is specifically looking for overseas recruits.

Advertise where? When I was looking for a job last time, practically all offered 
"jobs" on company web sites where
several months or more old - and even if there where newer they had distinct "we are 
not really looking for anyone in
particular, but we had to have Jobs section on our web site because everyone else 
does" feeling about them. "The Press"?
Now that I would like to see... maybe I gave up too soon (after a month or so) but I 
distinctly remember seeing 1 (one)
IT related add in that period of time.

I read Computerworld and InfoTech Weekly errr... weekly, for over 3 years, and if you 
see more then one job a month
advertised there for Christchurch, this is a reason for big excitement.

Only large recruiting agency that I ever seen advertise any jobs in CHC methodically, 
was "advertising" exactly the same
add for about 2 years, via monster.co.nz and couple of times in Computer world. 
Ironically, long list of skills in this
add matched almost 80% of my skills, and when I persistently asked how can it happen 
that they advertise for 2 years
need for same skill set, but I can't even get an interview, they finally organized the 
"interview".

I was "interviewed" by people that received crippled version of my CV (recruiter that 
did it would probably call it
"adding the value"), that did not know for which position they are "interviewing" me 
for, because "actual person
supposed to do the interview called in sick today". So after a 10 minute chat about 
the weather, I left.

Next day I was told by the agency that "they are not interested in me at the moment". 
I responded with "This is
ridiculous!", and the recruiter in cold blood asked me "What is ridiculous?". The add 
that was posted every 2-3 weeks
for 2 years, was never posted again. Now I wonder... Do you?

Why am I spending my time writing about this? Because this is a big problem for IT 
industry here, which I'm part of.
Which we are part of. Even more so of the problem then for job seekers. Trust me, for 
the caliber of people we are
discussing here, finding a job in unnamed country not so far away will be very easy, 
IT recession or not, if they are
not greedy. And they are very unlikely to be, if they are looking for a job in 
Christchurch, New Zealand. They can
probably just go to AKL for that matter. They would obviously prefer to find something 
- if not anything (including
cooking in the example that started this discussion), but they can't. We had them on 
the silver plate. We let them go.
It's not only a shame, it will cost us all.

Now I wonder, what would happen if I lost my job, and walked straight into "Work and 
Income" office. Would they help me
find a job, as they would in most countries? How would they do it, for someone like 
me, almost 20 years of IT
experience, hopelessly overqualified, and only think I know how to do is IT. Nobody 
advertises jobs, no obligation to
file available positions, no job market whatsoever. Maybe someone should pick up the 
phone and call them, see if they
have statistics for unemployed IT workers.

One can talk on and on about IT related initiatives, government support, targets and 
goals, but if IT job marked is not
created here, in Christchurch, this will just not happen in my opinion. Competition on 
internal level is needed to
create industry that can compete on external (international) market. Companies capable 
of succeeding on this markets,
that are not rooted in environments that create industry competition internally, are 
exceptions in every single global
industry - software, mobile phones, shoes, cars, vine...

Some of the crucial elements in negotiations between countries scheduled to join EU is 
free trade, free capital flow,
and free workforce flow. Now try to imagine the last one without the job markets and 
associated infrastructure.

Only people that represent the best on the global level are capable of producing the 
best on the global level. How
exactly would I find such a person without interviewing tens if not more candidates 
for each job? How would you attract
this candidates, if 90% of the jobs never get advertised? "Word of mouth solutions" is 
a slogan of RealContacts. Not to
say they don't have a place in job market, but think about where would a global 
capitalism be if it relied only on "word
of mouth" and where would US economy be without mobility of it's work force. To start 
with, Silicon Wally would never be
created.

People are what makes a company, and for an IT company, when you remove chairs and 
computers, it is only people that
make a company. I was working in IT industry in at least 10 countries, but have never 
seen situation like this, with
possible exception of southern Spain. I have also never seen so many people in wrong 
paces - not necessarily incompetent
people, but in wrong places. BA's trying to do support, sysadms doing DBA's work, team 
leaders acting as software
designers... results where usually half baked, everyone was getting frustrated, but 
everyone also kept quiet - knowing
how hard would it be to find the job that is the right match for there skills and 
ambitions. Or even worse, any job at
all.

About half of this kind of people I met since arriving in CHC are no longer here - 
some of them very capable man and
woman. Some can say, "money", but I say it was much more then that. One of them, a 
wonderful person and big talent, hard
worker, a man called Geoff, a true Kiwi spirit guy born here, fishing, BBQ's and all, 
left CHC and New Zealand simply
because he felt his career is not going anywhere. He looked high and low for years, 
inside his company and under every
rock in Christchurch to find a way to lift his career on the next level, get out of 
the mud he got stuck in, and failed.

It is not that there was no opportunities for him here, he just could not find them. 
Probably some team leader was hired
to do software design work, instead of Geoff - based on the "Word of mouth solutions" 
methodology. "Hey John, grab a
beer, I need a software guy?". "Sure Bob, I know one, have another one, I'll tell him 
to call you tomorrow." Sounds
familiar? "It's how we do things around here, son."

I often tell people asking about my "salary expectations" that if they give me that 
elusive "right" job, I'll do it for
free. Hell, I'll pay them to let me do it. Ok, I really like my job, but there are 
many people out there same as me,
especially in places like CHC - you can be reasonably sure they are not here for the 
money. The rest already left. All
we need to find the right places and right jobs for this people, and to do it we need 
a job market.

There is no doubt in my mind that unless a job market is created in Christchurch, IT 
as an industry will not go
anywhere - but competent and skilled people will.

We need to mobilize recruitment agencies, as well as employers. We need to get 
employers to abandon the "Word of mouth
solutions" as a primary method, and we need to get recruiters to put an effort in 
building a market here for there
services. CS can play a crucial part in this process - we need to get people together. 
Advertising available jobs should
become a rule, not an exception. We also need a central place for this, untill proper 
jobs market is created.

BTW, am I the only one that tried to use "jobs" link on top of the Canterbury Software 
web site:

http://www.canterburysoftware.org.nz/spis/runisa.dll?SV:CSTechJobsAvailable

I'm not sure what "SPIS Site Automation Services" is all about, but I see no mention 
of word "job" there...

I staid in CHC by accident more then anything - I was already half packed and ready to 
go home. So we hear this story
again and again - and it's affecting even more people with a lot of experience and 
wide range of skills. To say I heard
"over-skilled" phrase more times then "interview" would be understatement of the year. 
I had no problem doing work on
offer, so why did they? I got a 3 month contract in AU, manager there said "We have no 
problem with you being over
skilled, if you don't, come do the work". So why are Kiwis short-changing themselves 
all the time?

No matter what we might think about http://realcontacts.com it strikes me as very 
appropriate that there idea was born
in Christchurch .... Good luck to them, I say. But we need much more, and we really 
need it now.

> ICT is such a wide field now - do we know which skills are in scarce supply?

Hard to say - and with 90% of needed skills not even advertised, we will probably 
never know.  We might think this or
that, but with so many people in wrong places, it is not uncommon to find a guy with 
10 years of DBA experience doing
coding, in company stating it needs a good DBA.

We can look to AKL and WEL for answers, but it's not the same thing. AKL gets a lot of 
imported "Java Programmers" and
".NET programmers with 10 years of commercial experience". Don't laugh, miracles do 
happen!

WEL has a lot of "IT managers" that used to be used car salesman.

Given the speed of change in IT technology in general, and by definition the small 
size of IT companies in CHC, I guess
"fast learners" are in scarce supply here.

> It seems to me the Poly's are turning out 'website developers' a dime a
> dozen.  Are these really scarce skills?

There are 'website developers', and then there are 'website developers', as with any 
skill. With current emphasis on
cutting IT budgets, 'website developers' often do a work 'website developers' should 
be doing - but managers just don't
have a choice. This created an illusion that there are a lot of 'website developers' 
looking for a job - just as there
where a lot of 'Java programmers' looking for a job a year or two ago, and before that 
'ERP consultants', and before
that 'Y2K consultants'... all the way back to 'desktop publishing' and 'Visual basic' 
people...

Job seekers are very flexible - they tend to be exactly what you are looking for. 
Finding out who exactly are they, is
another exercise completely.

I recently had a experience working with one person, presented to me as an 'website 
developer'. The person had actually
developed a simple web site for one Christchurch company. When presented with CMS 
based web site, and stripped of
drag-n-drop point-n-click tools, this person showed the real extent of 'website 
developers' skills. Is this person a
'website developer'? Maybe, for someone. Was this work/position ever advertised? 
Guess...

> I know there's a shortage of
> imbedded code developers and hardware/software overlap people. What else?

"hardware/software overlap people" are a separate issue. I would probably be one. 
Problem is that mostly companies
making hardware are looking for this kind of people, but are highly skeptical (and I 
don't really blame them - there is
a big difference in attitude here) about people with strong software background. It is 
not necessarily the skill they
are after, it is mostly the experience, and they tend to jump over every CV that don't 
include high percentage of HW
work in last year or two. They won't admit it in most cases, but what they are really 
looking for is a hardware person
that is comfortable with software. If they would be willing to look at people that 
don't fit in this pigeon whole, they
might find lot more people to talk to.

My guess that embedded skills are also exaggerated by lack of correct targeting. 
Embedded software and hardware platform
market consolidated dramatically in recent years, and is now largely divided between 
embedded Linux variants and Windows
CE/Embedded 2002. Increases in capacity (CPU, memory, available tools) created 
situation where RT programming is not
really needed in 98% of applications, and this also applies to machine code 
(assembler) programming. Not sure about
Windows background folks, but I would say that every UNIX developer that ever ported 
code to a different CPU would be
capable of doing today's "embedded" code development in no time.

Well, if you read all this, I guess you are interested in this subjects. So why not 
write a line or two for others to
know what you think?

Or if you prefer, you can send it to me directly.

Cheers,

Yours, Andrej Falout, http://falout.org/disclaimer.html
Project manager, Aubit project: http://aubit4gl.sf.net
Software architect, http://maketxt.com/
PLEASE NOTE: All HTML email sent to me WILL BE DELETED AUTOMATICALLY WITHOUT READING.


> Cheers  Sue
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Carol Webb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: 27 March 2003 17:03
> To: Canterbury Software Email Forum
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [csforum] Are we going to let this one get away?
>
>
> Did anyone not see the story in Tuesday's Press about the extremely well
> qualified and experienced American website developer who has been looking
> for work here for eight months and is now packing his bags to return home
> with his skills?
>
> Homeward bound
> 25 March 2003
> Where are all the IT jobs in Christchurch? Will Harvie talks to an American
> web developer who is preparing to back his bags and head home after having
> no luck jobhunting.
> See the full story here:
> http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,2355956a28,00.html
>
> and if you have an opening, or know of someone who does, please email him
> asap.
>
> He's Aaron Parkening mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Thanks in anticipation
>
> Carol Webb
> WebbWords
> 32 Lindsay St
> St Albans
> Christchurch
> Tel: 03 377-6402
> E-mail: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Website: http://www.globe.net.nz/~carol
>
>
>
>
>
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