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5 IT skills that won't boost your salary

It no longer pays to be a PC, NetWare or HTML expert
By Denise Dubie , Network World , 04/17/2008
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Technical skills may never die, but areas of expertise wane in importance as technology advances force companies to evolve and IT staff to forsake yesterday’s craft in favor of tomorrow’s must-have talent.

"There is less need for system-side knowledge. In the past, IT folks had to understand a lot about memory, drivers and address locations, and what used which interrupt, but nowadays that stuff is plug-and-chug even on many Unix systems," says Brian Jones, manager of network engineering at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University’s Tech Communications Network Services unit in Blacksburg. "I feel like all the skills I have picked up along the way are valuable and help shape my thinking and troubleshooting abilities. I don’t know how to value or devalue these skills; it’s like they have taken on new value now."

Industry watchers would be hard pressed to name specific IT skills as entirely dead or completely useless, but some skills are well on their way to being considered a thing of the past -- as reflected by the declining pay associated with them. As hot skills like virtualization rise to the top of company must-have lists (see "Wanted: 10 IT skills employers need today"), high-tech talents in certain operating systems and specific vendor products fall to the bottom. Here are five high-tech skills that don’t demand the pay they once did.

Plain old HTML

As companies embrace Web 2.0 technologies such AJAX, demand for skills in HTML programming are taking a back seat. According to Foote Partners, pay for skills in technologies such as Ajax and XML increased by 12.5% in the last six months of 2007, while IT managers say they don’t see a demand for technology predecessors such as HTML. "I’m not seeing requirements for general Web 1.0 skills -- HTML programming skills," says Debbie Joy, lead solution architect for CSC in Phoenix.

Legacy programming languages

Skills in programming languages such as Cobol,  Fortran, PowerBuilder and more don’t rate like they once did.

"Certainly the Cobol people that had a resurgence with the Y2K bug aren’t in demand," says John Estes, vice president of strategic alliances of Robert Half Technology, an IT staffing consultancy. "Certain other applications such as Delphi  and PowerBuilder,  [which were] very big in the '90s, are no longer in demand." 

IT work-force and compensation research conducted by Foote Partners revealed that Cobol, PowerBuilder and Jini noncertified skills were among the lowest-paying skills in the second half of 2007. David Foote, CEO and chief research officer at Foote Partners, says the research shows not that such skills aren’t in use today but that companies aren’t willing to pay for them. "There is still a lot of C and Cobol around, though these skills are worth very little paywise," Foote says.

NetWare

Operating system know-how continues to be in top demand among hiring managers, but expertise in Novell’s network operating system NetWare isn’t keeping up with other technologies in the same area. "Networking software such as NetWare isn’t near what it was in the '90s," Estes says. And Foote adds, "Windows Server and Linux skills have replaced, or are replacing, NetWare skills" in terms of demand.

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Nonsense!By Anonymous on April 21, 2008, 12:16 pmAny company worth spit and my resume will appreciate reading skillsets that specifically speak to EXPERIENCE. Sure the actual tool/skill may not be used the current...

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Sorry Nonsense...By Anonymous on April 21, 2008, 2:59 pm...but this is all true. I have been in the IT business since 1980 and the skills above are useless. We oldies need to realize that we can never rest our skills....

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very true, untl...By Anonymous on April 21, 2008, 4:01 pmTHe statemnet you don't need people with foundational knowledge is true, until you have a problem with an abstraction layer.

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All your software development jobs are belong to us!By Anonymous on April 22, 2008, 2:53 amFast forward to the future (2065 perhaps): where will you be then?

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You sound like a p*ssed off old Cobol or Assembler guy, er, I meBy Anonymous on April 22, 2008, 9:36 amYou sound like a p*ssed off old Cobol or Assembler guy, er, I mean Dino.

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IT Skills not needed.....By Jim on April 22, 2008, 10:23 amVirtual this and that has been around for a minimum of 3 decades in one form or another. Mainframes have, and continue to have 'Virtual' in every aspect of the...

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