Upskilling and visible adherence to professional standards through retraining and internationally recognized qualifications will now be key to confronting the globalization of many traditional IT skills. According to the report by a BCS working party on offshoring -- chaired by Elizabeth Sparrow, a leading authority on the issue as well as the author of a new book on global outsourcing -- the growing trend to offshore IT skills means that at least 12 per cent of current UK IT jobs could be lost by 2010. But although the offshoring market will continue to grow by 20 per cent year on year, the future for the British IT profession is far from bleak, claims the report. For example, the British IT sector is currently faced with skills shortages in growing areas such as systems integration, project management and security technologies. While the increasing need for IT professionals to provide business analysis and added value in sectors such as financial services, the law, market research, architecture, engineering design and public services including the NHS, means that a more rounded skills profile will be key to the future competitiveness and market worth of many of today's UK IT professionals.
The BCS report cites the low unemployment rate among UK IT professionals -- less than 4 per cent -- as indicative of the current buoyant state of the IT profession. But the offshoring trend, developed on the back of improved telecommunications and inexpensive bandwidth, means that the IT profession cannot afford to be complacent. Sparrow is adamant that the fast-evolving IT services market opens up real opportunities for British IT professionals to work in new industries and to provide services from the UK to world markets. However, she cautions, the profession needs to critically review its performance in comparison with the best in the world. Otherwise it risks overselling itself and underestimating the capacity of overseas workers to provide high-quality, cost-effective services. By failing to identify and understand its current competitive advantages means that it will lose out on new opportunities.
In order to address a perception that overseas workers do not produce quality work, offshore suppliers are now investing heavily in achieving compliance with internationally recognized quality management standards such as the Capability Maturity Model (CMM), and this is setting the norm for the new global IT services market. In addition, the BCS -- a body long established as the voice of the British IT profession -- has noted a significant increase in applications for membership and its range of IT training and qualification products from overseas IT workers.
According to BCS chief executive David Clarke, "The challenge for British professionals now is to gear up for the rapid globalization of the IT services industry that is well under way. Traditional IT skills such as software development have become globally ubiquitous and a narrow focus on technical skills and their application will not help tomorrow's professionals. But all too often, IT staff can underestimate their business knowledge and expertise too.