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The ten skills to look for when you hire for the cloud

Andrew Brooks @andrewitwc
Published: June 4th, 2014
New online IT training touted to help meet skills shortage
For years CIOs and IT managers have complained about skills shortages in their staff, a situtation acerbated by the seeming never-ending change in
information technology. But next month the CompTIA IT education trade
Published on: May 1 5th, 201 4 Howard Solomon @itworldca
Syndicated
The cloud computing steamroller continues to roll along. As part of its 2014 IT forecast, TEKsystems surveyed around 900 Canadian and U.S. IT
managers at organizations of varying size and found that 59 per cent planned to spend more on cloud computing in 2014 than they did in 2013.
Of course as more enterprises move more of their applications into the cloud, the demand for IT staffers with cloud experience is naturally keeping pace.
A background in cloud computing isnt just a nice-to-have any more; its fast becoming an essential, and employers who know what they need are willing to
pay for it.
A Computerworld report tells of one IT engineer with cloud computing experience going back seven years virtually to the dawn of cloud computing
itself. Though this person just moved to a new position as a DevOps engineer at an endpoint and server security firm, he reports that his cloud computing
know-how is getting him around 20 recruiter inquiries a week.
But what are the skills exactly? For starters, cloud computing still covers a range of areas, so informed employers arent looking for over-specialized
candidates. They need people who understand a variety of programming languages and platforms. The skill set varies from one employer to the next, but
in the end it looks as if there are ten skills that are pretty consistent across the board.
1. Cloud projects are dominated by the programming languages Perl, Ruby, Ruby on Rails and Python, as well as Java and JavaScript. Candidates dont
need to know them all, but knowing just one isnt enough.
2. An understanding of the DevOps software development method, where developers work with operations staff.
3. Database skills, especially the SQL and MySQL programming languages, as well as Hadoop, the Cassandra open-source distributed database
management system, and MongoDB.
4. Mobile app development skills.
5. Virtualization experience. Virtualization is essentially what makes cloud computing more flexible and increases utilization.
6. Deep knowledge of one or more cloud platforms, such as Google and Amazon, as well as specific SaaS products like Salesforce.com.
7. Linux. The open-source stalwart dominates many environments, including Infrastructure-as-a-Service.
8. Puppet and Chef. You read that right. Many enterprises use the IT automation program Puppet, and Chef, a configuration management tool, to scale,
provision, deploy and configure equipment for the cloud.
9. The ability to build an API.
10. Security expertise.
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About Andrew Brooks
Andrew Brooks is managing editor of IT World Canada. He has been a technology journalist and editor for 20 years, including stints at Technology in Government,
Computing Canada and other publications.

In 2012 IDC estimated that cloud-related IT jobs in North America would grow 22 per cent a year to 2015, with the total number of positions reaching 2.7
million. But those positions may not be what you expect. According to one analyst, cloud projects dont require the same number of people or hours that
traditional IT does.
Holger Mueller of Constellation Research says that while an on-premises enterprise software deployment might require 100 people, a similar system
deployed over the cloud would need only ten, working one-third as many hours.
IT managers can expect to see head counts drop, while full-time staff are switched to cloud-specific roles. Permanent staff might not need deployment
skills as much as testing skills to cope with the frequent-release nature of SaaS offerings.
While weve come a long way down the cloud computing road and theres now a growing pool of IT pros with the right expertise, supply hasnt caught up
with demand. Thats good news for the pros, and a headache for enterprise IT leaders.

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