Friday, October 30, 2009

REMEDI Survey Reveals Skills in Demand

In a survey conducted by REMEDI recently, EDI professionals shared their perspective and experience about a range of topics including the skills most requested when contacted about projects. Here are the response details in regard to translation package, operating systems, and ERP preferences among companies seeking EDI professionals.

Translation Software - Sterling Commerce led the way with 41.6% of project inquiries requiring GIS skills compared to 17.7% of inquiries requiring GENTRAN knowledge and ability. While Sterling commanded 59.3% of the project based requests, Inovis and GXS based opportunities accounted for 19.7% of searches during the same period according to respondents.

Platform - Experience working with translation packages running on Windows servers outpaced UNIX based requests 32.2% to 27.7% respectively. Clients requiring experience in the AS400/iSeries midrange arena (22.2%) rounded out the top three requested platforms.

ERP - Leaders in the ERP skills arena included SAP representing 51.6 % of respondents and Oracle with 30.3% of professionals being sought after for those skills. JD Edwards ranked third with a 10.1% request rate among participants.

It’s also important to remind ourselves that survey results often provide a current snapshot, which may not reflect past or future job markets. As the recovery continues and companies reinvest in their systems, the need for workers proficient with currently less dominant EDI technologies will re-emerge in the form of upgrade and migration requirements in order to keep pace with demand and competition.

By knowing what skills are in demand you can examine your background and experience and ensure you are properly promoting and developing your EDI skill set in a way that’s in-sync with the current marketplace.


Charley Hughes has successfully placed hundreds of job-seekers into career-advancing positions during his eleven years as an Information Technology recruiter, and now works exclusively with EDI, EAI, and eCommerce professionals across the United States. Charley makes his home in Ohio with his wife of 22 years and their two teenage sons.

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

SCENARIO PLANNING, IS YOUR INTEGRATION GROUP READY FOR WHAT’S NEXT???

If your organization is like most, you have reduced staff and non-essential expenditures. Maybe you have consolidated business systems and the teams that support those systems. It is likely you have also sought to get more out of the business integration environment you already have in place. All this has been in response to an economy that has been in decline for about two years now.

So after maximizing efficiencies and effectiveness, what is next? Many we have been in touch with have gone, or are going, through scenario planning knowing things will go one of three ways. For the balance of 2009 and 2010, the business environment can stay about the same, get worse, or get better.

If things stay the same most will proceed in maintenance mode, continuing with regular business network integrations. Only new high ROI projects, mission critical projects like on boarding new partners, and upgrading software as support lapses, will be undertaken. IT groups will also seek to utilize their integration tools in new and different ways to maximize support of the business without acquiring new software and expense.

And what if things get worse? Focus will quickly turn to keeping the organization alive. Further reductions in staff are possible as organizations turn to concentrate on core competencies. Assistance from outside the organization will be called upon in an as needed or ongoing fashion. Only projects that possess the highest ROI will be started/completed, along with projects supporting existing customers or those that help land new ones.

How about when things get better? Finally, you will be able to focus on those projects providing great ROI that were not launched in the past given business conditions. It is also the perfect time to invest in the business integration suite or enterprise communications tool(s) that you have been researching. New software and technology such as this can be an excellent platform to support a moderate to rapid recovery. And recovery will occur; it is really a matter of time. Were you quick enough to cut expenses and change operations in the downturn? Most organizations were not. Will you be prepared to make investment in your integration platform to support the organization and participate fully in the recovery? Having the recovery scenario prepared will help you get the best tools and talent before the deals and resources get snatched up. (See Hiring Trends).

What are the recovery scenarios and odds as it relates to the above? While recovery will vary by industry, region, and other things, I found some probabilities assigned to different types of recoveries in the recent UBS Investment Strategy Guide. The likelihood of a moderate recovery 55%, deflation / double dip recession 20%, v-shaped recovery 15%, and stagflation 10%.

So while the type of recovery is unknown, it’s a great idea to plan and be ready for it. Many believe we are already in recovery. Time will tell.

Good luck with your scenario planning.