Security skills top IT chiefs' wish lists

By Natasha Lomas, Special to ZDNet Asia
Friday, March 14, 2008 12:25 PM

'Safety first' is still the motto written in sweat above the door of IT departments everywhere, but research suggests change is coming.

Three-quarters of IT managers rate security as the most important skill for IT professionals to have, according to a survey of more than 3,500 bosses by tech industry body CompTIA.

The results also reveal there is a significant skills gap in countries, including the United Kingdom, with established IT industries.

Seventy-three percent of respondents in these countries identified security, firewalls and data privacy as the most important skills to their organization today--but just 57 percent said their IT staff are proficient in these skills.

The security gap is even wider in China, India, Poland, Russia and South Africa where the emergence of a strong IT industry is relatively recent, said CompTIA.

But security may be set to be knocked off its pedestal in the near future.

More than half (55 percent) of IT bosses surveyed said mobile, wireless and RFID skills will become more important than all others within five years.

Bob Cockshott, a technology translator for the Location and Timing Knowledge Transfer Network--an industry body set up by the government to research, develop, operate and apply location and timing technologies--said these areas are of growing importance for businesses.

He said in a statement: "Technologies which harness the power of RFID, mobile networks and wireless protocols are a big growth area of the market. The knock-on effect is that IT professionals must now acquire the right skills to exploit these technologies in new and existing applications so their employers' can draw maximum benefit from their adoption."

Natasha Lomas of Silicon.com reported from London.


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