Retaining skilled technology experts is essential, but faces a number of challenges.
CXOs report that the skills shortage has grown to the point where it is now a major concern. Research from analyst houses, recruitment firms, and forums for business technology leaders all concur that there is a shortage of technology skills at a time when technology is having its most significant impact on business. As a result, business technology leaders are increasingly looking at how they can retain the talent they already have in-house and prevent their most valued human assets stepping out of the door to relieve another CIO’s talent challenge.
Retention Challenge
The Harvey Nash 2020 survey reveals that technology employees are well aware of their potential to change roles if their current employer is not responding to their needs; their research found that two thirds of tech employees were happy in their role, but were considering a role change. Notably, 40% of respondents said their existing work and personal life balance was prompting the consideration. Pay still remains a motivation (59%) - possibly heightened in early 2020 with the spectre of global trade wars, pandemics, and political unrest on the horizon.
Despite the importance of pay, a wider culture change is sweeping through technology teams, organizations, and society as a whole. As the next generation of employees joins the workforce there is a major change in employee needs. Technologists in organizations that had a good social purpose were less likely to change roles, Harvey Nash found. Discussions at the 2020 World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, Switzerland suggest that social purpose is extending and will continue to be increasingly important for organizations, in particular if they are to attract the talent they need.