The Pak Banker

Most wanted: Skills that will land you a job in UAE

- DUBAI -AFP -AP

The UAE's tech sector could be the first one to post a recovery on the recruitmen­t side… and it could be a strong one. There are already signs of that. If the suitable candidates are not available locally, recruiters are extending the search to India and Eastern Europe and fly them in when flights commence.

The UAE's e-commerce industry is definitely on a hiring spree, even as other categories are still trying to come to terms with their staff requiremen­ts after the pandemic. Recruitmen­t agencies are being sounded out for roles like data scientists/analysts, project/product managers, full-stack developers, UI/UX developers, and even "technology evangelist­s".

If you look at the whole supply chain of ecommerce - right from conceptual­ising and designing a tech platform to the middle layer of marketing and customer service to the last leg of logistics and delivery - that is where the majority of hiring is taking place. "If you look at the whole supply chain of e-commerce - right from conceptual­ising and designing a tech platform to the middle layer of marketing and customer service to the last leg of logistics and delivery - that is where the majority of hiring is taking place," said Abbas Ali, Senior VicePresid­ent at TASC Outsourcin­g.

COVID-19 has finally convinced

local businesses that they can no longer afford to go slow on their digital/tech investment­s. The last few weeks, when most work was getting done remotely, was brutal on any organisati­on that didn't have the basic infrastruc­ture in place. Salaries for the in-demand positions in tech range on average from Dh17,000 to Dh35,000, depending on experience and projects delivered. And of course, also dependent on how desperate employers are to get the talent on board.

Companies are also hiring specialist skillsets from India and Eastern Europe and getting them to start work remotely. "They are available to join immediatel­y and don't affect the project's go-live date," said Ali. "For most tech-based roles, new recruits can begin remote work immediatel­y." Human resources (HR), online and digital marketing positions, however, are suffering as a result of the virus attack. Advertisin­g and media roles too have taken a disproport­ionate share of the downturn.

"All companies we deal with have reduced HR functions across the board," said David Mackenzie, Group Managing Director at Mackenzie Jones. "Roles being cut are in the areas of HR director, learning and developmen­t, as well as training since companies are functionin­g with reduced workforces."

The mid- to senior end of the market has seen the most losses in the initial weeks of the crisis. There are not too many senior level jobs being advertised in the UAE, considerin­g the cost to business. Most of the larger organisati­ons have already trimmed their managerial positions - and more cuts will happen through June and July. Finance and sales roles in pharmaceut­ical, FMCG and education sectors are being actively advertised. "Big business groups continue to fill roles rather than create new jobs," said Mackenzie. "These candidates are either a replacemen­t or the roles have come about as a result of restructur­ing,"

Parts of the healthcare sector is hiring - A new trend is of UAE corporates hiring nurses and a healthcare team to check on employees' health status. They get paid between Dh8,000 to Dh10,000 a month, according to TASC Outsourcin­g.

 ?? HONG KONG ?? Anti govt demonstrat­ors sit as they were detained during a lunch time protest in Hong Kong, China.
HONG KONG Anti govt demonstrat­ors sit as they were detained during a lunch time protest in Hong Kong, China.

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