2010
DOI: 10.1145/1743546.1743584
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The requisite variety of skills for IT professionals

Abstract: Introduction IT professionals are beset by ongoing changes in technology and business practices. Some commentators have suggested that, in order to stay competitive, IT professionals should retool themselves to gain competency in specific in-demand technical skills. This article argues that thriving in such a dynamic environment requires competency in a broad range of skills, including not only technical skills, but non-technical skills as well. Our research shows that IT departm… Show more

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Cited by 75 publications
(54 citation statements)
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“…However, while PM today remains firmly focused on this traditional "objective" or "hard" perspective, there seems now to be an increasing focus on the more "subjective" and "soft" factorsleadership, motivation, group dynamics, interpersonal communication, culture, and ethicsthat could be regarded as essential to all professional endeavours [20]. A research conducted by Gallagher, Kaiser, Simon, Beath, and Goles [21], shows that while both technical and nontechnical skills are important, the skills most critical to retain in-house and most sought in new mid-level employees are non-technical skills such as PM, business domain knowledge and relationship skills. Project success depends upon buy-in and the influence that the project manager is able to exert on the relevant stakeholders to accomplish the project [22].…”
Section: The Influence Of Project Manager Skills On Executive Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, while PM today remains firmly focused on this traditional "objective" or "hard" perspective, there seems now to be an increasing focus on the more "subjective" and "soft" factorsleadership, motivation, group dynamics, interpersonal communication, culture, and ethicsthat could be regarded as essential to all professional endeavours [20]. A research conducted by Gallagher, Kaiser, Simon, Beath, and Goles [21], shows that while both technical and nontechnical skills are important, the skills most critical to retain in-house and most sought in new mid-level employees are non-technical skills such as PM, business domain knowledge and relationship skills. Project success depends upon buy-in and the influence that the project manager is able to exert on the relevant stakeholders to accomplish the project [22].…”
Section: The Influence Of Project Manager Skills On Executive Supportmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the findings from this research stream suggest that IS/IT professionals are viewed as employees and service providers first and as technicians second. The stakeholders queried in these studies include IS and non-IS managers (Lee, Trauth and Farwell, 1995 Gallagher et al , 2010). Those investigating the skills of IS/IT managers identify managerial skills as most important (Lee and Lee, 2006).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both technical and nontechnical skills are critical for IT professionals (Gallagher, Kaiser, Simon, Beath, & Goles, 2010). Business skills, project management skills, and systems analysis and design skills (both technical and client-facing) are important (SIM Advocacy Research Team, 2006).…”
Section: "So You Want To Be a Requirements Analyst?"mentioning
confidence: 99%