Featured Post
You Can Increase Your Average Employee Retention Rate
You Can Increase Your Average Employee Retention Rate You Can Increase Your Average Employee Retention Rate Accomplish you despite eve...
Thursday, November 14, 2019
8 Essential IT Skills to Improve Your Technology Job Search
8 Essential IT Skills to Improve Your Technology Job Search 8 Essential IT Skills to Improve Your Technology Job Search Staying current in the technology and IT certifications is just the start.A career in Information Technology requires skills previous generations of IT executives ignored or scorned. (People skills? What are those?) The modern IT executive must be a master of the technology he manages plus the business lines it supports. What follows are the eight essential skills, provided by tech pros themselves, that executives must demonstrate to advance in an IT career. Technical savvy Thereâs no getting around the fact that IT stands for âinformation technology.â Your experience must show a proven track record of leveraging technology to increase performance, productivity and competitive edge. But technical savvy is nothing without⦠Business acumen Hiring managers are looking for people who can integrate knowledge of technology with knowledge of business. Technology no longer just supports business â" it drives it. The decisions made around technology, and the ability to identify new products and services that will take an organization to the next level, are among the most important made at almost all organizations. Communications skills Have you ever seen the âSaturday Night Liveâ skit where Jimmy Fallon plays Nick Burns, an IT help desk employee who revels in making end-users feel like idiots? Itâs satire, of course, but thereâs always a kernel of truth to satire. It canât hurt to ensure that you are in no way falling into the âIT guyâ stereotype, especially as you are looking to move up in the industry. Ask trusted colleagues among your organization for feedback on your communications skills, and take their constructive criticism to heart. The ability to speak multiple languages Along the same lines as No. 3, itâs important to be fluent in the languages (and different dialects) of technology, business, your organizationâs industry and end-user concerns. Project management skills Hiring managers want to see that you have been successful at project management. Itâs not enough to know your stuff; you have to know about everyone elseâs stuff and be able to manage the various technologies, business applications, skills and personalities involved in a project. Certifications While certifications are not high on the lists of the experts who spoke with Ladders, if you do list your certifications, you have to also be able to articulate how you have applied them. âIâm not a fan of certifications by themselves,â said Robert Rosen, CIO of the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases. âWe sometimes use them as a filter, but we put lots more weight on experience. Iâve seen too many certificate holders that couldnât apply that knowledge.â A curious mind Hiring managers are looking for people who are always looking at how things work and how to make them better. âI found some of the greatest people have the attribute of frequently saying, âI wonder why it did that?â and then finding out why,â Rosen said. Flexibility and foresight The rate of technological change is staggering, and employers require IT pros who are able to not only adapt to that change but to be out in front of it.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.