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> From: Krys_Theodore@WHJI.COM > > My 2 cents. I have been looking for PAs and SAs for months. We are > offering a good wage. About the only people who are crossing my desk were > newbies who got into consulting firms because they needed bodies for Y2K > projects. They were let go 'when the jobs dried up' and are now looking > for something else. Those with experience and/or strong natural abilities > are staying where they are. > > Looking for staff in all the wrong places? > > Krys When I go to IBM school, there is some talk between fellow students on related issues. It is apparent that some geographic areas had gluts of talent while others hurting so bad they using internet to bring in programmers from other countries ... from all over the world. While IBM would have to balance responsibilities carefully, I think there is room in their education centers to have some kind of publication hand-out that connects students there with job markets for those skills, perhaps indirectly, using a special edition from one of the trade publications aimed at such students. I am at IBM school paid for by employer & happy with my current job. But there are other students there who paying their own way & in extremely hazardous job security scenarios who may well be some of the PAs that would fit the needs of posters on this list. Conferences like COMMON might be another place to distribute some publication that contains advertisements from people looking for jobs & from companies looking for people with the relevant talents ... I know this skirts close to violating the codes of ethics but there has got to be some way to help bring together the people who are over qualified & under employed with the companies that are hurting for locating talented staff. I know several individuals who are not programmers but are excellent business analysts when it comes to our ERP ... I told them that there is a big demand for people who understand the inner workings of the ERP, if those individuals also have appropriate skills to fit into some more traditional aspect of the business world, such as management or computer staff, but good communications skills trumps everything. Some of these individuals are no longer working at Central & are not happy in their new positions, and have tried & failed to get back into Central. They are my friends - I want to help them without compromising my position. In my view, ERPs have gotten so complex that end users need a type of help that traditional computer people are ill-equipped to provide, be it continuing education, or whatever, that is like an SA but does not neccessarily require any programming know how. I imagine that other computing environments than ERPs have similar needs. If you can craft your advertising & business structure so as to be looking for SAs so as to get at folks that I consider to be future potential BAs, I am suggesting that is well worth considering, since these people continue to languish in companies that are seriously in pain for a good BA but top management is oblivious to this. We recently hired several BAs at Central. We located them by going after industries that are in decline in North America, or which have suffered recent declines, in which the internal manufacturing logic is similar to our industry. Many more BAs applied for the positions than were needed, and management was hard pressed to pick the best. There are industries in decline with a glut of talent, while there are industries in growth hurting for talent. I would think that head hunting companies should have a BA on staff that understands this kind of nuance. Al Macintyre ©¿© http://www.cen-elec.com MIS Manager Programmer & Computer Janitor +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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