Channel News and Analysis - Channel Insider
Empowering the next generation Channel
 

Bull’s Eye Awards
Nominations Open for Channel Insider 2009 Bull’s Eye Awards
Nominations are now open for the Channel Insider 2009 Bull’s Eye Awards, which recognize excellence in customer service, technology prowess, business acumen, channel leadership, communications and community building, and innovation among vendors, solution providers, distributors and channel services companies.



Sponsored Links
  • Control VM Sprawl, What You Don’t Know Can Hurt You
  • FREE Sophos Encryption Tool: Encrypt, compress and share files easily
  • LSI 6Gb/s Portfolio Expands to Include SATA+SAS HBAs
  • Reduce the cost of managing your mobile workers.
  • Find out 7 Ways to Drive Data Center Efficiency
  • SonicWALL breaks through network and email gridlock
  • Save up to 40% on calling costs with Avaya Aura™



  •  

    Retirement Epidemic May Stress Tech Biz

    in Channel News and Analysis


    Article Rating:starstarstarstarstar / 0
    Article Views: 500

    Rate This Article:
    Add This Article To:
    Nearly 25% of the average tech staff is about to retire. Start training some fresh faces.

    The 75 million men and women born in a wave after World War II are now cresting onto the shores of retirement. One-quarter of the U.S. population is about to shut its collective briefcase, slip into sandals and take off for the Sun Belt.

    That will leave a big hole in your information-technology department.

    Railroad operator CSX Corp. has installed software to computerize the train-scheduling expertise of veteran dispatchers ("Track Changes," April, p. 61). Dow Chemical's chief information officer, Dave Kepler, who turns 53 this year and has 30 years at Dow, is tutoring six technology managers to spread his institutional wisdom.

    What are you doing?

    Novices may know new technologies. But they lack tacit knowledge of how your company actually operates—or the informal connections needed to get things done that don't appear on any org chart. That's OK when new hires come in ones and twos. But try getting things accomplished if you have to replace 25% of your employees in the next five years.

    Resource Library:

    As its first baby boomers turn 60 next year, FirstEnergy Corp., a $12.5 billion utility in Akron, Ohio, will transfer the insight and knowledge of its long-timers to younger recruits.

    The company plans to hire up to 75 new technology workers over three years. The gray-hairs will mentor incoming technologists for stints of a few months to two years.

    The transfer of brainpower comes as FirstEnergy brings on 3,000 new employees companywide. They will ultimately replace the 23% of its workforce that is expected to retire by the end of 2007.

    "We can't afford not to do this," says chief information officer Brad Tobin.

    "Deep mentoring" and rotations through different departments are Tobin's two main tacks. Newbies will work alongside experts in programming, system maintenance, database management and the like for eight to 10 hours per week, absorbing the same information, attending the same meetings, performing the same tasks. Also, there will be classes led by internal managers, even drilling into informal knowledge such as who are the key players at FirstEnergy.

    Then, rotations into customer service, finance and other basic functions will broaden the new hires' knowledge of the business and the technology that supports it. Java developers could learn to maintain the mainframe customer database for three months, then elect a three-month field gig to see how to extract natural gas from the ground. Network administrators could learn project management for a year, then explore how the sales group operates for a few billing cycles.

    Giving employees the chance to learn things that pique their interest will keep them around, Tobin hopes. Retention is paramount.

    Check out eWEEK.com's for the latest news, reviews and analysis on IT management from CIO Insight.

    He now retains more than 90% of his 675-member technology staff every year. But he doesn't expect that will continue unless he counters the baby boom exodus. Utilities generally don't draw a lot of new talent because they tend to use proven, stable technologies—nothing cutting-edge.

    As Tobin points out: "I'd like to be able to look back 20 years from now and see an I.T. leadership team in place that was in this program."

    You can check his success in 2025. Or you can do something today.

    Inventory the technical and management skills of your tech staff. Predict what would happen if each person left.

    Discuss with human resources and retirees how to get the skills out of retirees' heads before they go. List the specific tasks each person performs and technologies in use. Enumerate less concrete things as well, such as which person manages a specific meeting and the mental steps involved in solving a particular problem.

    Orchestrating a mind-meld of this scale requires methodical mentoring, and stamina. "It won't be easy," Tobin says, "but it needs to be done."

    Now.





    Discuss Retirement Epidemic May Stress Tech Biz
     
    >>> Be the FIRST to comment on this article!
     

     
     
    >>> More Channel News and Analysis Articles          >>> More By Kim S. Nash
     


     


    [ci] feeds
    XML
    Add Channel News, Product Reviews, Trends and Analysis to your RSS newsreader or My Yahoo!


    HTML PLAIN TEXT

    Keep on top of news for VARs and Resellers with CI's Weekly Newsletter and Alerts.

     


    CHANNEL RESOURCE CENTER
     
     
    Enterprise Mobility Zone
    The Enterprise Mobility Zone (EMZ) blog is a tool designed to help senior IT executives discuss, create and deploy next-generation mobile strategies in their organizations.
    Go beyond yesterday's tactical approach to mobility!
     
    Build A More Efficient Data Center
    Demands are growing but budgets are not. Solve your pressing IT issues using the resources you already have. Determine which technologies can help you drive efficiencies and how they are applied. Gain a quick ROI on new initiatives
    Find out how
    Let Enterprise TechBrief do the work for you. Aggregated content, tech news, product reviews, vendor updates, how-to’s—all you need to boost your efficiencies and cut costs, all from one place.
    enterprisetechbrief.com