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Silicon Valley IT Hiring Demand Stalled in August

By Juli Morris on September 9, 2009 in Computer/Math/IT.

Online job ads for IT professionals by Silicon Valley companies ended the month of August up 15 percent from their three-year low in mid-April. Available ads reached a new 2009 high in mid-August; however, the last week of August saw a five percent drop from the prior week that erased the August gains. Total Hiring Demand remains 56 percent below its three-year high in October 2007.

Source: WANTED Analytics 2.0

Source: WANTED Analytics 2.0

The IT occupations with the greatest Hiring Demand in Silicon Valley are 'Computer Software Engineers, Applications', 'Computer Systems Analysts', 'Web Developers', 'Computer Software Engineers, Systems Software', and 'Computer Programmers'. The direct employers with the most available online job ads this month were Apple, Yahoo!Inc., Google Inc., eBay, and Motorola. Read more »

Silicon Valley IT Hiring Demand Shows Upward Movement

By Juli Morris on August 11, 2009 in Computer/Math/IT.

Online job ads for IT professionals by Silicon Valley companies have risen 15 percent after hitting a three-year low in mid-April. Total Hiring Demand, however, remains 56 percent below its three-year high in October 2007.

Source: WANTED Analytics 2.0

Source: WANTED Analytics 2.0

The IT occupations with the greatest Hiring Demand in Silicon Valley are 'Computer Software Engineers, Applications', 'Computer Systems Analysts', and 'Computer Software Engineers, Systems Software'. The direct employers posting the most online job ads were Apple, Yahoo!Inc., Google Inc., eBay, and Motorola.

Our most recent update to our Hiring Demand Indicator data for the IT sector showed that overall conditions had worsened for IT professionals nationwide, dropping 5.7 percent in July. Compared to last year, Hiring Demand for IT occupations is now down 35.7 percent. The HDI for IT Occupations presents national year-over-year growth broken down by 6-digit SOC codes, and indicates the occupations within IT that  have seen the most severe drop in hiring demand, along with those that are weathering the recession better than average.

WANTED's Supply/Demand Ratios™ for the San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara MSA show only one of the IT occupations with the greatest demand in Silicon Valley as ranking above the national average: 'Computer Software Engineers, Applications', at 121.26. 'Computer Systems Analysts', and 'Computer Software Engineers, Systems Software' register at 48.54 and 52.28, respectively. The Baltimore-Towson, MD MSA is the nationwide S/D Ratios leader for each those IT occupations. Supply/Demand Ratios measure Hiring Demand for an occupation in a local market, controlling for the national average Hiring Demand for that occupation.

Silicon Valley IT Hiring Remains Flat

By Juli Morris on July 6, 2009 in Computer/Math/IT.

Online job ads for IT professionals by Silicon Valley companies have risen slightly off of the three-year low in mid-April, but Hiring Demand for the first half of 2009 remains flat.

Silicon Valley Hiring Demand for this sector is down 12.7 percent from its 2009 peak in early February but, overall, appears to have stabilized.

Source: WANTED Analytics 2.0

Source: WANTED Analytics 2.0

The IT occupations with the greatest Hiring Demand in Silicon Valley are 'Computer Software Engineers, Applications', 'Computer Software Engineers, Systems Software', and 'Web Developers'. The direct employers posting the most online job ads were Apple, Yahoo!Inc., Google Inc., Motorola, and eBay.

Last week we posted an update to our Hiring Demand Indicator data for the IT sector, which showed that overall conditions had improved slightly for IT professionals nation-wide. The HDI for IT Occupations presents national year-over-year growth broken down by 6-digit SOC codes, and indicates the occupations within IT that  have seen the most severe drop in hiring demand, along with those that are weathering the recession better than average.

The outlook for the sector remains guarded. Forrester Research now predicts that global IT spending will decline 10.6 percent this year, an increase from the 3 percent it had previously forecast.

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