Technology professionals seem to be happy with their jobs, but they are also
extremely stressed and likely to recommend careers in other fields to their
friends, according to a new report from Dice.com.
The Dice Tech Appeal Index measures a person’s inclination to recommend the
information technology field to others as opposed to another industry. Some
1,000 individuals were surveyed, including 565 adults currently working in
IT.
For IT companies, there is good news in the survey, which was released
Wednesday, October 3. Ninety-one percent of survey participants say they are
somewhat or very satisfied in their current job. What’s more, 92 percent of
respondents note they intend to stay in the IT field for at least the next six
months.
The bad news is that despite the general satisfaction with their jobs, IT
professionals are more inclined to recommend a career in other industries to
their friends than they were a year ago. Recommending jobs in financial services
went up by almost 10 percentage points to 56 percent, as it did for media and
entertainment, which moved to 44 percent from 34 percent.
“Although the satisfaction and loyalty levels of IT professionals continue to
be strong, we're seeing evidence of possible retention issues over the long
term,” said Scot Melland, chairman, president and CEO of Dice Holdings Inc.,
parent company of New York-based Dice, in a release.
One key culprit may be work-related anxiety. The study found that 91 percent
of respondents associate the work with stress—mostly due to workload, dealing
with clients and pace of the job.
The fear of exporting work overseas also weighs on the minds of IT
professionals. Forty-six percent of survey participants say they are somewhat or
very concerned about offshoring, an increase from 39 percent a year ago.
—Gina Ruiz