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For employers, role vacancies can be a real problem, and lack of clarity about whether EU citizens can work in the UK or not is raising major sourcing concerns.For candidates, the tech shortage is significantly less ominous, as an abundance of hard-to-fill tech positions could mean less competition between specialized workers. But what’s behind the major tech worker shortage in high-level roles?
Regardless of seniority, all of the roles that make the list are highly specialized, creating unique sourcing challenges among recruiters and hiring managers who don’t have years to wait.This is great news for tech workers. Indeed.com says that “lots of tech companies are looking to hire, which makes it a great time to be a tech worker. The power lies with the job seekers, whose skills and specialisms are in demand for roles that employers are having to be patient in filling”. Across the board, there doesn’t seem to be a correlation between how difficult the role is to fill and the average salary. For example, the highest paying role on the list is Principal Software Engineer at £62,303 with a 51.6% difficulty rating. Compare this to the first place position, Senior Data Modeler, with a difficult-to-fill rating of 65.15% but an average salary of nearly half of a Principal Software Engineer.
Even when you take a step back and look at the hardest-to-fill roles in the overall labour market, six of the ten are tech roles.indThe tech roles making this list are software engineer, software architect, front-end developer, system engineer, software test engineer and full stack developer, with all six on the list pulling in salaries higher than the national average of £27,600.
In other words, these post-Brexit policies have cut an already limited talent pool of tech workers across the UK.When it comes to hiring strategies, employers need to get creative. According to of Indeed, “finding the right staff requires a winning blend of hiring strategies. But the current jobs market has raised the bar for many employers”. This mentality underscores the fact that job seekers truly do hold the power in this scrappy sourcing environment.Speaking on how the political and economic climate has impacted the tech talent pool, Richards continues:
The Brexit connection is hard to overlook. Many of the ‘hardest to fill’ roles have historically been ones that were filled by EU workers drawn to the UK by Britain’s more abundant job opportunities. With official data showing net migration from the EU slowing, these roles are set to become even harder to fill…. Clearly, in a tight labour market like ours, much of the power already sits with the workers, but these roles that are notoriously hard to fill could prove especially fruitful for ambitious job seekers looking for a new challenge.For tech workers paying close attention, it could be a worthwhile use of time to pursue a new forte in the industry. For example, instead of a graduate using their computer science degree to jump into a front-end career path, consider focusing on a data modeling path. Tech freshers ought to keep an eye on these lucrative, low-competition roles to guide their university trajectory.
For those who are experts in data modeling, systems consulting and the like, the UK promises a thriving and lucrative future for highly specialized and senior-level tech professionals in the years to come.