Leading IT vendors, training firms and certification bodies have joined
forces with the European Commission in an attempt to develop solutions to
Europe's growing IT skills crisis.
The new e-Skills Industry Leadership Board will co-operate with the European
Commission and consists of representatives from a range of stakeholders,
including Cisco, Microsoft, Oracle, exam bodies CompTIA and Exin, and IT
training provider Global Knowledge.
Richard Pryor-Jones, EMEA President at Global Knowledge, said that the aim of
the new group was to provide a forum for all the relevant bodies capable of
addressing the IT skills crisis to trade ideas and initiatives. "We want to
reflect on what is happening in different countries and start to establish some
best practice sharing across different countries and companies," he explained.
"The aim will be to pick out some of the best skills programmes and try to
spread them out for wider adoption."
He added that the new board would aim to have some recommendations back to
the European Commission by the autumn and then seek backing to roll out some of
the programmes from both the European Union and individual companies. "We will
focus on practical delivery ideas and the board will be steeped in a
practicality, rather than all the conceptual stuff, which is perhaps where some
of the existing IT skills initiatives have fallen down."
In particular, Pryor-Jones said that the board would focus on initiatives
designed to make IT more appealing as a career choice. "I don’t think we need
anymore qualifications," he observed. "We need to address why people don’t find
IT sexy and why even computer science graduates are leaving the sector. We will
look at schemes that can address those issues."
The European Commission is increasingly keen to back such initiatives,
according to Pryor-Jones. "The EC sees this as a pure and simple competition
issue," he said. "They are seeing skills shortages across the continent and
salaries going up as a result and they realise they are in danger of losing more
and more business to rival economies with lower cost structures as a result."
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