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October 19, 2007

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marc

I think his comments where something to laugh at I was in the IT section when I worked as a Civil Servant but the PLP failed to keep me updated with training. Guess I was not like them as a Black male

Andrew

I've been involved in a lot of technical interviews of IT professionals in Bermuda. In cases where there were Bermudian applicants, these applicants were interviewed first. Overwhelmingly, those that considered themselves as technical professionals lacked the necessary credentials to back their claims. Many were technically proficient, but failed to obtain any industry certifications. What was most alarming was that when asked why they never received any certifications, most failed to take responsibility for their own careers and instead blamed their employers. "My boss wouldn't give me time off to study for the exam" or "My company wouldn't pay for the exam" or "The company wouldn't pay for my books."

IT service providers will not employ employees that do not have demonstrable skills - they have a responsibility to their clients to provide qualified technical resources. Those qualifications are evident as certifications. The employee should feel responsible enough for his or her own career to obtain these certification without being driven by an employer begging the employee to pass the exams.

Put yourself in the position of the professional services manager of a company like ACT, CCS, ICS or Logic. You are being pressured to drive professional services revenue and you have clients that are more than willing to pay for professional technical help. Do you hire the Bermudian who knows a little about computers and claims to be competent or do you hire the Canadian with MCSE and CCIE certifications? When you present the CV of each resource to a client for consideration, which one do you think will command a higher billable rate?

Until three are an abundance of certified Bermudian IT professionals, these companies have no choice but to recruit from overseas to fill these positions. The workforce equity act will do little to change this

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Random musings on politics, finance and life on the 21 square mile string of islands often referred to as Bermuda, by Denis Pitcher.

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