IT Week Letters, reader comments and views from articles read from the magazine or online
IT Week Letters
IT Week homeIT Week homepage 



« SaaS prices are too high | Main | Printers may pose a risk »

Computer hobbyists have much to offer

Another obstacle to gaining IT employment is that most employers do not value computer hobbyists who have done lots of work with computers in their free time (IT graduates still lack practical experience, 10 August).

These people often have lots of practical skills in servicing computers, designing web sites and working on open-source software projects. They are also more resourceful and better at looking outside the box than most people who just gain their knowledge about computers through institutionalised education. But a high proportion of employers only want people who have gained their skills in a commercial environment.

A friend of mine decided to teach himself web site design and ended up developing sites for two local organisations as voluntary work. In a job interview at an IT firm, the interviewer asked him, “Did you do this in a commercial environment?” Self-education and voluntary work meant nothing to this interviewer; he was more interested in corporate bureaucracy such as managing deadlines and budgets. Consequently, my friend did not get the job.

RS

September 10, 2007 in Skills | Permalink

Comments

I would absolutely agree. Experience and knowledge counts for nothing. Unless you have acquired those little certificates in some subject that is probably not relevant for the actual work you will be doing. For example where I live, the only computer course I could find at the local college was on Cisco Networks. How many small/medium sized companies outside of large cities use Cisco networks? Practically none. I don't live in a large city, and don't really want to move to one. I could do an MCSE in Windows Server, but employers don't seem to value that one. I can't get a day release from my IT job, so doing a degree is out of the question too. My employer doesn't want me to have any more qualifications, because then they would probably have to pay me a decent wage, or face losing me.

Posted by: Jason Davies | 11 Sep 2007 17:10:06


 Site credentials: About | Privacy policy | Terms & conditions | Top of page
 © Incisive Media Ltd. 2008
 Incisive Media Limited, Haymarket House, 28-29 Haymarket, London SW1Y 4RX, is a company registered in the United Kingdom with
 company registration number 04038503