Why Your Tech Employees Keep Quitting

Why Your Tech Employees Keep Quitting by Scott Maurice

Retention is a huge issue for most tech related companies right now. Even Google’s tech employees only stay at the company for about a year on average, according to the most recent PayScale report on employee turnover.

Sure, tech jobs are a plenty, and these employees are constantly being presented with new opportunities to get their next raise or promotion somewhere else. But that’s not the real reason they’re leaving.

It’s also true that a lot of today’s tech jobs are occupied by millennials who have shown the world by now that they aren’t interested in the rigid 9-5 jobs of generations past. They feel no impulse to stick around a job for 5 years just to “pay their dues” before they can move up. But that’s also not the reason tech employees are quitting so quickly.

If you want to understand why tech employees leave their jobs, you need to understand what these employees are looking for in a job in the first place. Most of these people didn’t get into tech just for the pay. They got into it because they are intrigued by solving complex puzzles, they like to completely immerse themselves in their projects, and they relish in seeing their work have a greater impact on the world.

Chances are if your tech team keeps bailing before even hitting the year mark, your organization is guilty of one or more of these.

The job is boring.

Tech people hate routine, maintenance focused work, especially when it can/should be automated. Busywork is bad for anyone’s morale, but tech people especially have a harder time justifying their time to themselves when they feel they aren’t contributing anything unique to the process.

Repetitious tasks like deploying code to servers should be delegated to a machine, so your staff can focus their energy on problems that require them to use more of their brainpower. If you have staff repeating a mechanical task every day/week, figure out if you can find a technical solution.

Moreover, investing in automation, when it’s fueled by a business model that monetizes it with an economy of scale, allows organization to have more financial agility. In a truly cloud enabled economic model, employees can focus their time on work that truly matters. Your business, therefore, benefits from both a humanitarian and revenue objective standpoint.

They lack a greater purpose.

Millennials especially have shown the world that they are a socially conscious generation. They care about where their products come from and how they are made, they care about preserving the environment and global warming, and they believe in sustainable practices. When young tech workers don’t feel like their work is improving the world around them, they aren’t going to understand the true impact of vacating their job.

One reason these employees can feel disconnected from a greater purpose, even if they work at a nonprofit dedicated to saving blind puppies, is that when you are relegated to a desk all day it’s hard to see the impact of your work really come to fruition. One of the best ways to help tech employees internalize impact of their work and increase their personal fulfillment with their job is by having them meet the customers and clients who appreciate them so much. When they get to not only hear, but see, interact with, and build relationships with those whose lives they affect, they are much more likely to feel connected and stay at their jobs.

They aren’t being treated as individuals.

Some people like to have music play while they work. Others need dead silence to focus. Some people learn by doing and others learn by taking notes first and then trying on their own. Some people don’t need any supervision (and even resent too much oversight), while others get distracted easily and need help directing their creative energy. Each person is different and deserves to be treated well for exactly who they are.

The problem with treating everyone uniformly is that you fail to praise the individual. When people don’t feel they are appreciated for their own uniqueness, they also tend feel they are more replaceable. If you can’t treat your employees as the unique people they are, they are going to try to find someone who can.

Their manager can’t manage.

One of the top reason people leave their jobs is because of their manager. Just because someone is exceptional at code doesn’t mean they will make a great leader. Managing a team of diverse human beings from different backgrounds who have different career and personal goals, lifestyles, opinions, expertise, etc. while directing them towards a common goal is a huge task for anyone. Managers need to understand how to empower employees, encourage innovation, cultivate collaboration, mediate disagreements, act on good ideas, deliver good/bad news, and more. If you aren’t investing enough in developing your managers, your employees aren’t going to feel you’re investing in them either.

Final Thoughts

It’s true that some of your tech employees may just be leaving for the boost in pay, but the majority are leaving because of a deeper dissatisfaction with the job they’ve been tasked with. People in general want to feel challenged to grow, fulfilled when they rise to the occasion, appreciated as an individual, and supported by their organization. Provide these tenants of a quality job, and you’ll find that your tech employees will stick around for a lot longer.

 

The Top 5 Cloud Skills You Should Acquire in 2016

 

The Top 5 Cloud Skills You Should Acquire in 2016 by Scott Maurice

LinkedIn recently cited Cloud and Distributed Computing as the number one skill that can get you hired in 2016.

LinkedIn members with skills like Hadoop, HBase, and Hive listed on their profiles increased dramatically from 2014 to 2015, making it jump from not even being rated (due to a low number of members adding these items to their profiles) to the #1 spot in 2015, and the best skill to get you hired in 2016.

As cloud computing has become a technological cornerstone for businesses across the globe, employer demand for cloud professionals has exploded. In 2015 alone, there were an estimated 18 million cloud computing jobs globally, according to WANTED Analytics.

Of those 18 million, 3.9 million of those jobs are in the U.S., with 384,478 in IT alone. And according to WANTED Analytics, the median salary for IT professionals with cloud computing experience is $90,950, and the median salary for positions that pay over $100,000 a year is $116,950.

Basically, it’s a great time to be working in cloud solutions, so let’s breakdown this flourishing industry into five popular skills required of the modern cloud professional.

Migration

It takes longer for some companies than others to get up to date with the latest tech standards. Millions of businesses are still in the process of planning and executing the migration their on-premise infrastructure. This means there is still a significant demand for professionals with the skills to facilitate the process.

If you’re put in charge of overseeing this migration, you will need a sound knowledge of the different cloud deployment models available to businesses. You’ll also need to understand the existing infrastructure of the organization you’re working with and the knowledge of how to map applications and workloads running on existing servers and relocate them to their cloud equivalent.

Looking for a course you can take to learn the ins and outs? Try Microsoft’s Private Cloud certificationSpecialist certification in Implementing Microsoft Azure Infrastructure Solutions, and MCSA: Windows Server 2012 course (which can be deployed across both public and private cloud offerings.)

Security

According to RightScale’s 2016 State of the Cloud Report, security is a top concern for companies using cloud-based platforms.

The top challenge cited for companies was is lack of resources/expertise (i.e. there’s a high-demand for skilled workers!) which remains a consistent concern across the levels of experience these companies have working in the cloud—experience was divided into 3 subcategories: Cloud Beginners, Cloud Explorers, and Cloud Focused. The second most important challenge (especially to Cloud Beginners): Security.

Security was ranked as the #2 challenge by Cloud Beginners (35 percent), the #4 challenge by Cloud Explorers (28 percent), and the #5 challenge by Cloud Focused users. While security concerns decrease as a challenge as users gain cloud experience, it is still a crucial concern for companies across the board.

To develop your cloud security skills, then (ISC)2’s Certified Cloud Security Professional (CCSP) certification is for you.

Database Querying Languages + Platforms

The amount of data that we create today is almost incomprehensible. Each day, in fact, we create 2.5 quintillion bytes of data, but this explosion of data is a very recent one. In fact, 90% of the data in the world today has been created in just the last two years. But all that data is meaningless unless it can be analyzed and accurate conclusions can be drawn from it.

Companies need employees with the skills to thoughtfully and meaningfully draw insights into their customers, the market, and their products as well as the ability to store and manage this data. This is where learning a database querying language and an associated database platform come in.

SQL is by far the most important language to learn, and there are courses all over the web that offer lessons in this. Start out with Codecademy, and from there you can see if you need to supplement other courses.

Popular database platforms include Microsoft SQL Server, Oracle Database, and open-source platforms like MySQL, Hadoop and MongoDB. Oracle has their own certification courses, as does Microsoft. MongoDB provides their own MongoDB University and Oracle provides MySQL training. Cloudera can help you learn Apache Hadoop.

Linux

More than 25% of servers powering Azure are Linux based, which means there’s a very high demand for cloud professionals with Linux expertise in the market right now. Microsoft has been increasingly working in the open-source market, which means the demand is only set to grow.

Learn how to design, architect, build administer, and maintain Linux servers with the Linux Foundation Certified Systems Administrator course. Microsoft also offers a MCSA: Linux on Azure course that will help you develop the skills to create cloud-enabled Linux solutions that take advantage of the full potential of the Azure platform.

Programming languages

Everyone knows that developers are always in hot demand, and working in the cloud has only allowed developers to build, deploy, and manage applications more efficiently. Companies need talented developers to manage these efforts. Languages like Python, Perl and Ruby have become more popular in recent years, but traditional languages like .NET, Java, and PHP continue to have high demand.

Again, Codecademy is a great resource for learning many of these languages, and their courses are free.

Conclusion

As the world moves more and more into the cloud, the need for cloud professionals is only set to grow. No matter if you’re looking to make a career change, shift, or simply increase your value as an employee for a potential raise or promotion, learning these skills will make you invaluable to your employee and the team you’re working in. Don’t miss out on this essential technology shift that’s taking place all over the world.