AIXSPadmin
MIS
In the Sunday paper today there was a half-page article about IT professionals starting new careers after being laid off their IT jobs.
Some individuals had been laid off twice in 1 year and they left IT altogether as have others. One man had a wife and toddler to support and had contacted 150 companies and never had an interview. He has started his own company now cleaning vents at restaurants; and in a year he expects to be earning what he was in IT ($80,000). Plus, as a bonus he stated that he did not have stress like he had before, and he doesn't have to work as often so he can spend more time at home with his wife and child. (That would be nice! I generally work at least 2 weekends a month and carry a rotating pager.)
A few weeks ago they had another article about IT workers and their careers. In that article it stated that many IT workers, even if not already laid off were scared of the future and were leaving for new careers.
Some say that with all of the workers being laid off and going to other careers, that when the hiring starts again that there will be a shortage of qualified workers. But, these same people agree that pay levels will not reach the pinnacle of 3 years ago.
I understand fully where these people leaving IT are coming from. Their IT jobs had salaries cut (mine was 6% plus health insurance takes another 1% of check so a total reduction of 7%), the pressure of SLOs (they are always implementing some new &*$&@! measurement where I work - some damn new thing to be accountable for), more work (hell they cut staff or don't rehire and work still needs to be done). All of this for management who always want to know why this happened or that happened, and don't ever let it happen again, we do not tolerate mistakes. When our salaries were cut management was asked point blank if there was going to be layoffs and they side-stepped the question (of course.) All of this leads to STRESS!
Yes, leaving for another career does seem like it may truly be worth it. And besides, if salaries don't go back to the previous levels (and in an article I read they say 2003 IT salaries expect a slight decline) and you still have the stresses I mentioned above, why is it worth it?
Some individuals had been laid off twice in 1 year and they left IT altogether as have others. One man had a wife and toddler to support and had contacted 150 companies and never had an interview. He has started his own company now cleaning vents at restaurants; and in a year he expects to be earning what he was in IT ($80,000). Plus, as a bonus he stated that he did not have stress like he had before, and he doesn't have to work as often so he can spend more time at home with his wife and child. (That would be nice! I generally work at least 2 weekends a month and carry a rotating pager.)
A few weeks ago they had another article about IT workers and their careers. In that article it stated that many IT workers, even if not already laid off were scared of the future and were leaving for new careers.
Some say that with all of the workers being laid off and going to other careers, that when the hiring starts again that there will be a shortage of qualified workers. But, these same people agree that pay levels will not reach the pinnacle of 3 years ago.
I understand fully where these people leaving IT are coming from. Their IT jobs had salaries cut (mine was 6% plus health insurance takes another 1% of check so a total reduction of 7%), the pressure of SLOs (they are always implementing some new &*$&@! measurement where I work - some damn new thing to be accountable for), more work (hell they cut staff or don't rehire and work still needs to be done). All of this for management who always want to know why this happened or that happened, and don't ever let it happen again, we do not tolerate mistakes. When our salaries were cut management was asked point blank if there was going to be layoffs and they side-stepped the question (of course.) All of this leads to STRESS!
Yes, leaving for another career does seem like it may truly be worth it. And besides, if salaries don't go back to the previous levels (and in an article I read they say 2003 IT salaries expect a slight decline) and you still have the stresses I mentioned above, why is it worth it?