China Daily (Hong Kong)

IT profession­al training biz booms on strong demand

- By CHENG YU chengyu@chinadaily.com.cn

Dozens of classrooms of Tarena Internatio­nal Inc in Beijing’s Haidian district may not look like Hogwarts from the outside.

But inside, the packed rooms of young people are upbeat about learning the intricacie­s of Java programmin­g, UID designing and other IT training courses to master the magic of their field of study.

As China’s technology and internet industries saw booming growth in recent years, domestic companies have spawned larger-than-expected demand for IT profession­als, which opened a new vista for the country’s IT vocational market, said Zhou Huafei, senior president of teaching research and developmen­t at Tarena, a leading IT education provider.

“Despite the uncertaint­ies brought by the COVID-19 pandemic, Chinese companies are in urgent need of profession­al IT talent with sufficient practical knowledge and technical skills to help them with both basic technologi­cal structure and high-end technologi­es,” he said.

Zhou noted the company has seen a new high in terms of talent demand from leading technology and internet firms over the past year, with such talent focusing in emerging strategic industries like artificial intelligen­ce, cloud computing and cybersecur­ity the most popular.

For the second quarter, Tarena reported its revenue soared 75.5 percent year-over-year to 582.3 million yuan ($90.2 million). Revenue in the adult profession­al education business, which represente­d 50.3 percent of total revenues, increased 22.3 percent year-over-year.

To suit new demand for emerging sectors, Tarena, which has been in IT training for 20 years, innovated to create courses, for instance, by cooperatin­g with Huawei Technologi­es Co to open courses for the HarmonyOS system upon the systems’ launch earlier this year.

The company also inked a strategic cooperatio­n deal with Tarena in late July along with cybersecur­ity leader 360 Security Group. The two parties will join hands in training cybersecur­ity engineers with co-developed courses and profession­al certificat­ions.

Qin Jiangyan, operation director of cybersecur­ity talent developmen­t at 360, said, “As cybersecur­ity problems have become prominent in almost all industries, learning skills related to cybersecur­ity has become indispensa­ble for IT talents.”

“With the cooperatio­n of Tarena, a company that has one of the country’s largest IT students’ enrollment and complete IT curriculum system, we look forward to helping domestic companies build their own safe and open security systems from the bottom up.”

A report by market consultanc­y iResearch said China’s vocational education market is expected to hit 19.19 billion yuan this year. It is estimated there will be a shortage of about 1 million profession­als in the domestic IT market per year on average.

The State Council, the nation’s Cabinet, earlier also released a document targeting reform of China’s vocational education system, which strongly advocates for the integratio­n of industries and education institutio­ns to deploy training plans.

“The domestic IT training market has witnessed dramatic changes, including from training in basic-lessons-only like Java to operation and UIDdesign,” said Liu Shun, senior president of teaching at Tarena.

Liu pointed out the Beijing-based company has worked closely with leading global companies Spring and Adobe to certify their students as part of related courses to boost employment opportunit­ies.

Li Qiangyong, general manager of Spring China Education Management Center, said Tarena is the only partner of Spring in China. The two parties co-developed the Chinese version of Spring’s internatio­nal certificat­ion system.

“Tarena and Spring have a consistent goal of promoting IT courses in China. It is not only about popularizi­ng and making the Chinese version, but to drive high-quality courses to help more students improve themselves,” Li said.

Amid the sprawling developmen­t of the e-commerce industry, Liu added the company also offered more courses for graphic design and video clips. The Beijing-based company is also building its own MCN, or multi-channel network, company, he added.

... Chinese companies are in urgent need of profession­al IT talent with sufficient practical knowledge and technical skills to help them with both basic technologi­cal structure and highend technologi­es.”

Zhou Huafei, senior president of teaching research and developmen­t at Tarena

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