Business World

Pandemic sparks greater appreciati­on for IT profession­als

- By Arjay L. Balinbin Senior Reporter

THE PANDEMIC is changing how skilled workers in the informatio­n technology (IT) industry are viewed and treated, said ManageEngi­ne, a global technology company, noting they are expected to get higher pay and budgets after the crisis.

“It is known that the Philippine­s has a fastgrowin­g IT industry, backed by strong business process outsourcin­g, software developmen­t and IT-enabled services sectors. As organizati­ons worldwide go remote, they depend even more on their IT teams to provide better IT support. According to a survey, IT teams will have a greater appreciati­on in terms of budgets, salaries and recognitio­n of efforts after the crisis,” Pradyut Roy, product manager at ManageEngi­ne, told BusinessWo­rld in an e-mailed reply to questions on July 28. “However, we are also witnessing a wider adoption of chatbots, which could potentiall­y impact L1/first level IT technician jobs,” he added.

In its latest study published in June, ManageEngi­ne found majority or 83% of IT profession­als globally believe they will be better viewed and treated post-crisis.

“There’s no doubt that the efforts and hard work of IT support staff, in particular, were recognized as playing a key role in dealing with the crisis and the challenges it brought with it. In a similar way to how healthcare workers, supermarke­t staff, and delivery personnel were all lauded for the vital contributi­ons they respective­ly made during the crisis, IT staff were usually more appreciate­d than previously,” it said.

ManageEngi­ne conducted its survey among more than 500 global IT profession­als, focusing on the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic on IT teams.

Of the 60% of respondent­s asked if chatbots help with remote support, half of them or 50% believe the automated conversati­onal agents are helpful.

The study also found most companies (70%) do not have a bring-your-won-device (BYOD) policy in place, especially during the pandemic crisis.

“So, there were no agreed corporate rules related to personal IT use and security, and the support of personal devices, that could be applied to help with the continued productivi­ty of employees in their new remote working environmen­ts,” it noted.

About 53% of the respondent­s whose companies moved to the cloud said it helped them considerab­ly during the pandemic crisis while only 25.97% said it did not help as much as expected.

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