5 surprising IT skills that hiring managers want now
If your resume lists some of these skills as keywords, potential employers will be able to find you when they're doing searches
Ever wonder which up-and-coming tech skills are catching the attention of IT hiring managers? careers site Dice.com keeps track of the most popular terms that employers
search for, and it also notes when emerging skills start appearing in
keyword searches with greater frequency.
New trends often show up
first in resume database searches, since 80 percent of employers search
resumes before posting their jobs, says Alice Hill, managing director
of Dice.com. "It gives us a glimpse of some of the trends that are
coming up."
Most recently, Dice.com identified five up-and-coming skills based on
searches of the Dice resume database. Topping the list is iRise, which
makes a simulation platform that allows companies to test-drive business
software before getting too far into the development process.
Next
is an old-school term: COTS, or commercial off-the-shelf software. If
job seekers have developed software for a commercial software maker, it
might not occur to them to include the term "COTS" on their resumes, but
that's one of the top search terms on Dice.com.
Rounding out the top five emerging search terms are Crystal SDK, PeopleSoft Security, and NetApp.
Interestingly,
iRise also made the list of most popular search terms overall -- an
indication that it's emerging at a fast and furious clip. Dice.com's
most popular search terms overall, ranked from 1 to 10, are: Java or
Java developer or J2EE; .Net or .Net developer; business analyst;
SharePoint or SharePoint developer; project manager; Oracle DBA; C#; QA
or quality assurance; iRise; and PHP.
Being aware of the tech skills hiring managers are looking for can help job seekers fine-tune their resumes, Hill says.
Job
seekers oftentimes focus on sifting through and applying for posted
jobs without realizing it's a two-way street: Potential employers are
also on the hunt for candidates, sometimes for jobs that haven't even
been posted yet, and they find talent by doing their own resume
searches. The Dice.com platform provides tools to comb through millions
of resumes and mine the data.
"Our customers have very powerful
backend searching tools," Hill says. "It's not enough just to have a
good resume and apply for jobs. You also want to make sure your resume
has the right keywords so that potential employers are able to find you
when they're doing searches."
Search optimization is equally important for hiring managers, particularly as the job market heats up and and competition for key talent increases. "We work a lot with employers to teach them how to use the backend more efficiently," Hill says.
"There's
competition among the hiring managers. The ones with the best searching
skills will probably get to those candidates faster," Hill says. "And
for the seekers, the more optimized their resumes are, the more likely
they'll be found. The race is on for both sides."
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