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posted by on Monday April 10 2017, @04:01PM   Printer-friendly
from the talent-contest dept.

Silicon Valley is starting to realize that the huge talent pool of nontraditional candidates may be the answer to its pipeline problem.

The technology industry is now trying to figure out a way to attack its cultural and demographic homogeneity issues. One simple initiative is to begin to recruit talent from people outside of its preferred networks. One way is to extend their recruiting efforts to people who don't have four-year degrees.

IBM's head of talent organization, Sam Ladah, calls this sort of initiative a focus on "new-collar jobs." The idea, he says, is to look toward different applicant pools to find new talent. "We consider them based on their skills," he says, and don't take into account their educational background. This includes applicants who didn't get a four-year degree but have proven their technical knowledge in other ways. Some have technical certifications, and others have enrolled in other skills programs. "We've been very successful in hiring from [coding] bootcamps," says Ladah.

For IT roles, educational pedigree often doesn't make a huge difference. For instance, many gaming aficionados have built their own systems. With this technical grounding, they would likely have the aptitude to be a server technician or a network technician. These roles require specific technical knowledge, not necessarily an academic curriculum vitae. "We're looking for people who have a real passion for technology," says Ladah. He goes on to say that currently about 10% to 15% of IBM's new hires don't have traditional four-year degrees.

https://www.fastcompany.com/3069259/why-more-tech-companies-are-hiring-people-without-degrees

-- submitted from IRC


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday April 11 2017, @02:11PM

    by VLM (445) on Tuesday April 11 2017, @02:11PM (#492262)

    He goes on to say that currently about 10% to 15% of IBM's new hires don't have traditional four-year degrees

    That's fascinating because 30 years ago my first "real" job was at a mainframe shop and I got to know a lot of IBM folks for obvious reasons and at that time there was no point in applying unless you had at least a BS.

    I still sorta kinda keep in touch with those people which probably sounds weird to coasties but away from the coasts everyone knows everyone in the same city eventually, if they stay in the business long enough, so maybe thats not so weird.

    In some ways its the same today yet also being different in that today there is no point in applying to IBM unless you live in India or China and don't even bother if you have USA citizenship.

    Also our CE had been an IBM employee since he was a new grad for at least 40 years, but with massive downsizing waves I wonder if there's anyone left at IBM who's been working there longer than a couple years. Seriously "career" seems so dead at IBM that the average length of employment at Walmart or McD is now probably longer. At least in the USA. Maybe in China/India its better. You can only downsize 25% of the company every year for a couple decades until the average employee has only a year or two of experience.

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