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Gartner: IT Salaries Up; Oracle, Unix Top Skills Needed


7/16/2003 -- According to the "2003 IT Market Compensation Study" released earlier this month by people3, a Gartner Inc. company, the average base salaries for IT professionals in the U.S. rose 2.9 percent from 2002 to 2003. The median base salary rose 4.2 percent.

These figures were culled by comparing the results of this year's study -- based on data submitted in March by 151 organizations representing 43,900 IT employees -- with that of 2002, people3 said.

According to the study's executive summary, the average base salary for IT professionals surveyed in 2003 was $68,600 (only those whose data was also included in the 2002 and 2001 studies is included in this average). Employers in Western and Northeast states pay 6 to 7 percent above the national median, with those in Southern states paying 4 to 5 percent below, the study found.

Companies that currently outsource IT functions/skills "appear to pay lower salaries to their IT employees," the summary states. "We concluded that the outsourcing factor has the consistent effect, across the board, of driving pay levels down."

The study also looked at recruiting. According to people3, the skill that IT organizations report having the greatest difficulty in recruiting is Oracle administration, with PeopleSoft and Unix tying for second.

The most difficult-to-hire positions for IT organizations (in descending order) are database administrator, Internet/Web architect, network architect, network engineer and security analyst.

The annual study provides "incumbent-based" compensation data on base salary, total cash compensation, project milestone pay, other short-term incentives/bonuses, and other prevalent compensation practices regarding hot skill pay, variable pay and long-term incentives. It is available for purchase on Gartner's Web site here.  -Becky Nagel



There are 31 CertCities.com user Comments for “Gartner: IT Salaries Up; Oracle, Unix Top Skills Needed”
Page 3 of 4
7/17/03: College Student for Life!!! says: I would have to agree with most of the comments posted here. I thankfully am employed and am making well over the average cited in the above survey. Even so, I must say that for those who are lucky enough to have a job, it is still no walk in the park. In order to stay employable and marketable I have found myself resorting to pursuing a master’s degree (in CS) and a CCIE certification. Basically anyway that I can improve the value offered to my company. On top of that I’m looking for a school that teaches Indian as well as our help desk might be outsourced soon. Although if one does manage to get and keep a job that is insulated from being shipped overseas, what good is it if it pays the overseas rate? At this rate we will have a serious shortfall in IT staff in the U.S. Do you know what will happen then? The powers to be will enact legislation just as they did several years ago and bring in out of country talent. I’m willing to bet this time the salaries are not going to be as generous as they once were though. It just goes with out saying that this new global economy is good for employees in countries such as China, Russia, & India (after all $10 to $20/ hour jobs in those parts of the world is like a lot of money, even with no benefits), while simultaneously catastrophic to the U.S.’s IT industry is a boon to the wealthy. Until the people in power (CEO or politicians) enact policies to protect the ready export of IT work it would appear that other staple U.S. service sectors would soon follow. So we as individuals with in the IT arena need to stick together to get things changed, either that or learn how to speak Indian, Chinese or whatever the language is of the country that you will need to move to, to get that engineer job! But then again I don’t know s**t! That’s just my opinion.
7/18/03: Anonymous says: I am being certified for MCSE and living in Asia. I would like to ask about the job situation for IT workers in Asia. Does anybody know?
7/18/03: Screw The Sample says: These guys interviewed ONLY the employed honchos. Why not include all those who lost their jobs AND THEN get the average. In 1999 you'd be making $US60k as a developer. Today you can find a developer for $US30k.
7/18/03: Cdog from S.D., CA says: If these knuck's really wanted to find true numbers, they would probably find that increase was infalted. Due to some newer technologies and the massive decrease in lower income level support staff by way of layoffs and transcontinental outsourcing, the average is skued by the fact that there is a larger ratio of the higher income earners who are desparately clinging to their LAN Manager and CIO jobs as well as the always employed software programmers. I would bet dollars to doughnuts that this number is NOT accurate by any stretch of the imagination.
7/22/03: NotYou from Traveler says: It is getting better, in my IT field choice I am still getting 3-4 calls from headhunters a week and have received 3 job offers this month. I just took a 1 year contract for $125/hour with 1 day a week working from home.
7/22/03: Anonymous says: Crackhead
7/23/03: GMO from Arkansas says: Dude, What Field are you in and how can i get into it?
7/29/03: BadB from FL says: Cdog is right, far fewer people doing same amount of work as old crew. Therefore making decent salary. It's way cheaper for company and worker will run himself to death like a lab-rat on coke just so he doesn't end up like his peers. If you do have a job you have to do like College Student For Life!!! says and work your a$$ off to keep current so you are still employable once the current gig is over.
8/7/03: Mr Hammed Adeyemi from Nigeria says: I am a high school graduate who is interested in becoming an oracle data base administrator pofessional. I wan you guys to send me more informations on how I can achieve this, and also send me some books that will aid my studies because i have applied in an organisation called NIIT. Hope to hear from you guys soon. I like your site keep it up guys.
9/8/03: Anonymous says: I don't think most of these salaries are accurate. What's their sampling size? What kind of people? How much experience? People who have NOT had to change jobs will have the higher salaries compared to those who had to take on new jobs. Personally, my salary dropped to about 60% of what it was...and I can't really complain as I had to beat out 600 other tech candidates to get the position...
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