I generally agree with you, however degrees are BS anyway, skills are what matters. I've interviewed many with Masters degrees in the field they are applying for and didn't know their ass from a hole in the ground about subject matter related to the job they were applying for. This is not necessarily the persons fault for holding the degree but rather the college's for not teaching anything remotely useful about their major. I've been writing code and building circuit boards since I was 9, did not go to college, self taught, highly self disciplined and I'm paid very handsomely. But that's because I have the skills and the balls to back it up.Cornfed wrote:Traditionally a semi-qualified hire would be someone with an IT-related degree who you would then spend several years training up for a particular specialty. If you seriously can't find such people then that is really weird. I know of several people with IT degrees that can't find work. Then you have people who work as unpaid interns for years just to have something to put on their CV.davewe wrote:I can only speak from my own personal experience. I work for a very large tech firm with over 100K employees. My group has had a very difficult time get even semi-qualified hires and it's been that way for years.
I'd mentioned before on a similar topic, there is a shortage of "QUALITY" tech people, no shortage of wannabe's. I see lots of Senior this and Lead that on peoples work titles nowadays and yet they are barely what I would consider entry level in knowledge and experience, they belong in the help desk or some other junior role learning the ropes and gaining that needed experience rather than in senior level or lead positions. It's a case of the blind leading the blind.