Broader skill sets way to retrain

By Sol E. Solomon, ZDNet Asia
Tuesday, March 24, 2009 08:17 PM

Skills retraining can help employees stay relevant but the current economic slowdown may see a paradigm shift in the type of training required, where broader skills will see stronger demand, observed corporate human resource (HR) executives.

Michael Stickler, Pacific human resources senior director at Citrix Systems, noted that several roles in the IT industry have traditionally been very specialized and narrow in focus. However, IT job requirements are now broader in scope, he noted, adding that this trend is further accentuated by the current economic environment in which companies are expected to do more with less.

Stickler said: "While in some areas, technology specialists will continue to have their rightful place as subject matter experts, there is a growing need for 'generalists'--IT roles with broader skill sets.

"As such, employees who are able to wear multiple hats and have cross-functional product and solution knowledge will be more in demand going forward," he told ZDNet Asia in an e-mail interview.

Irrespective of the economic environment, Stickler said his company is "always investing" on training its employees to ensure they can present and deliver its technologies effectively. "We thrive on innovation and constantly raise the bar to deliver greater value to the customer," he said.

Similarly, independent software testing company AppLabs looks to equip its workforce with multi-skills through various training initiatives.

Headquartered in the United States, with testing facilities there, the United Kingdom and India, AppLabs recognizes the importance of training programs that will help elevate the workforce, compared to pure technical-focused training.

Arun Rao, the company's Hyderabad, India-based HR vice president, said in an e-mail interview: "While technology training does help us maintain the edge globally, I think one place where Indian [IT] practitioners have traditionally failed is their inability to challenge the customer and move logically to the next level--from being a typical contractor to a consultant."

Arun said the environment today offers organizations more time to provide employees with comprehensive training programs, without having to worry about commercial-driven issues such as revenue opportunity costs.

"If the paradigm, 'what goes down, comes up', is true, then we should be ready for the upturn by arming ourselves with more capabilities than what we have today," he said. "Therefore, the learning and development function is all the more important for the organization and its employees."

Keep focus on company offerings
Even so, the main focus of training efforts at Citrix and AppLabs continues to be on the company's product and service offerings.

According to Stickler, the majority of Citrix's training and retraining programs are determined by the company's innovations, product roadmaps and go-to-market approach.

"We need to ensure our employees are trained to sell professionally, support our channel partners effectively, and provide services for new products we are bringing to market," he explained.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

3 lessons a CIO can learn from Windows 7

Tech Management

Microsoft's missteps with Vista, and attempts at redemption with Windows 7, offers firms valuable lessons in IT, be it in rolling out a new corporate application or delivering millions of copies of a new OS.


Read more »



The ultimate 2012 recovery site: the moon

Blog thumbnail

Have you seen the disaster movie “2012"? A friend from Control Risks and I did, and we reluctantly concluded we wouldn’t be able to write off the cost of our..... by Nathaniel Forbes

Read more »

Tags

  1. acquisition
  2. acquisitions
  3. ceo
  4. china
  5. financial
  6. google inc.
  7. green it
  8. ibm corp.
  9. india
  10. industry
  11. information technology
  12. it outsourcing
  13. job
  14. microsoft corp.
  15. network
  16. outsourcing
  17. revenue
  18. singapore
  19. software
  20. u.s.