Backup Collaboration Mobile Security Storage Strategy Virtualisation
Privacy

Current Filter: Cloud>>>>>News>

PREVIOUS

Filtered Articles:4 of 188   Current Article ID:5054

NEXT



Mind the gap

Editorial Type: News     Date: 02-2015    Views: 2300   






Data centre skills gap will remain critical through 2015, says research

Independent research commissioned by Zenium Technology Partners suggests that the skills gap facing the data centre sector will continue to be a critical business concern going in to 2015.

The research - entitled ‘Motivation to Modernise’ – found that 93% of IT professionals were aware that a growing data centre skills gap still exists, and 64% said it will have a detrimental impact on their business within the next 1-2 years. However, despite the rising level of awareness around this issue, just 29% have moved to put measures in place to deal with it and 6% of respondents felt the issue was “nothing to worry about”.

Perhaps the most telling finding was that those who are more likely to migrate to new facilities owned by their company in the next 5 years were most concerned about the detrimental impact (87%) of the skills gap, whilst those outsourcing to a third party were less troubled (65%). Interestingly, a recent IT Skills Gap study by CompTIA also found that 93% of UK executives rate data centre management skills as important whilst 40% of UK executives expressed concern about possible skills gaps in that area.

“Given the size of the industry, the skills gap is more of a crisis than a minor concern,” said Franek Sodzawiczny, Founder and CEO at Zenium. “Data is driving every business today and the increasing demands for real-time access to it in order to stay competitive means that systems need to be running effectively and efficiently 24x7. Quite simply, you need the very best people supporting these infrastructures as failures can be catastrophic.”

According to the analyst group Gartner, the data centre industry is going to be worth around £150m annually by 2015, whilst the UK think-tank, the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), tells us that this industry will have created almost 300,000 new jobs between 2012 and 2015 in cloud computing services alone.

“The industry has been talking about the impending doom that the skills gap may inflict on the data centre sector for some time now, but not much progress seems to have been made in tackling it head on,” he said. “It’s good news that outsourcing always becomes a more popular business choice when belts are tightened but if operators don’t develop a long term view on how best to manage training and recruitment, they will undoubtedly suffer.”
www.zeniumtechnology.com

Like this article? Click here to get the Newsletter and Magazine Free!

Email The Editor!         OR         Forward ArticleGo Top


PREVIOUS

                    


NEXT