Demand for integration skills will soar as more IT departments attempt to
equip their businesses with more useful, flexible and interoperable systems and
services.
Whether technology departments are pushing through one-off projects in areas
such as business intelligence (BI) and content management, or attempting more
fundamental transformation through the adoption of service-oriented architecture
(SOA), it is clear they will need to acquire the right skills to integrate such
projects, whether through in-house training, recruitment or external third-party
providers.
Acquiring the lower-level technical integration skills will not necessarily
be a problem, says analyst Steve Craggs, director of Lustratus Research.
“Obviously, you’re going to need some skills in the tools and technologies you
choose to use,” he says. “But today many of the tools on offer are fairly
intuitive and easy to use. Of course, you will need a certain amount of
training, but I don’t think that’s where the main skills challenges lie.”
Organisations will either use proprietary integration tools, in which case
they should expect adequate training and support from the vendor, or they will
choose to adopt open standards, such as XML, Java and the SOA enterprise service
bus (ESB). There should be a fairly ready supply of open standards skills as
such technologies increasingly become part of integration specialists’ must-have
skills set.
But if organisations choose to adopt SOA for mission-critical systems and
analyst Gartner predicts that four out of five companies will have taken the SOA
route by 2010 the real integration skills challenges for IT departments will
be at a higher level, says Craggs. SOA involves a fundamental change to the way
firms think about IT namely, as a series of interoperable business services,
rather than as discrete IT systems.
“Organisations will undoubtedly need people who are skilled at writing
services as opposed to skilled at writing code on particular platforms,” he
says. “They will need people who can understand what each piece of code does,
and how to fit those pieces together from a business perspective to give the
business users what they need. These architecture skills will be prized above
all others.”
Brian Farrelly, European strategic projects director at derivatives broker
GFI
Group, says his organisation recently implemented a Tibco SOA system to
integrate its core operational software, and hopes to integrate other areas of
the business such as e-commerce in the future.
“I think there will be an increasing demand for more architecture people
within this environment because the product set we’ve chosen gives us most of
the technical underpinning,” he says. “So we shouldn’t need a team of low-level
programmers developing integration patterns, for example that capability comes
with the tools and the products that we’ve procured.”
Vocalink,
the company responsible for handling most of the UK’s electronic payments, is
another that has opted to take the SOA route. IT director Nick Masterson-Jones
expresses similar sentiments to Farrelly and Craggs.
“We’ve moved off a monolithic mainframe Cobol infrastructure onto a modern
Sun server/Oracle/BEA/Java SOA implementation. In terms of skills, one of the
main areas of shortage is people who understand the business and how to meet its
needs through the appropriate implementation of technology,” he says.
“We can find good Java coders, good Java designers, and good business
analysts. But finding people with intersecting skills who can look at a
business problem and design a solution which fits with existing services is
quite a challenge.”
Carphone
Warehouse is another organisation committed to SOA. But the key integration
skills challenge for David Byrne, architecture director for group IS, is data
migration, particularly the capability to extract data from various sources,
transform it to fit business needs and then load it into target systems, a
process known as ETL extract, transform and load.
“Growing companies such as Carphone Warehouse, which have many separate but
related businesses and occasionally acquire other companies, will have a strong
demand for ETL and data migration skills,” he says. “Any company which has
stated it is going to have a service-oriented architecture will require
facilities to integrate all its services.”
The public sector faces similar issues when it comes to bringing together
data and applications. Alasdair Mangham, head of information systems and
development at Camden Council, says one of the organisation’s biggest challenges
over the next few years will be data classification and cleansing. “We have a
lot of data stored in a lot of back-end systems and it’s a big job,” he says.
“For a couple of years we’ve had a single land and property database to feed
all our other systems using predominantly web services. That means we have
consistent property data across all our main systems.
“However, we don’t currently have that for people and that’s a big
challenge given both the size of the borough’s population and the fact that we
have a 23 per cent household turnover because of our central London location and
the large number of one-bedroom properties.”
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