The CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index continued its upward trend in Q2, marking the third consecutive quarter that information technology (IT) industry executives expressed optimism about business prospects. The index also suggests there is pent up demand among IT firms to increase their workforce. One-third of companies surveyed said they are understaffed, while 42 percent said they are fully staffed, but want to hire in order to expand.
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Positive Momentum Continues in CompTIA 2Q 2014 IT Business Confidence Index
1. Positive Momentum Continues in IT
Industry Business Confidence Index
Q2 Release | April 2014
Copyright (c) 2014 CompTIA Properties, LLC. All Rights Reserved. | CompTIA.org
2. IT Industry Business Confidence Momentum Continues
44.0
49.0
54.0
59.0
64.0
CompTIA’s IT Industry Business Confidence Index is calculated on a 100-point scale, using an aggregation of three metrics:
1). Opinions of the U.S. economy, 2). Opinions of the IT industry, and 3). Opinions of one’s company.
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
3. Economy Rating Narrows Gap with Other Index Components
36.0
40.0
44.0
48.0
52.0
56.0
60.0
64.0
68.0
72.0
Economy IT Industry My Company
CompTIA’s IT Industry Business Confidence Index is calculated on a 100-point scale, using an aggregation of three metrics:
1). Opinions of the U.S. economy, 2). Opinions of the IT industry, and 3). Opinions of one’s company.
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
4. NET Positive Ratings at the Highest Level in History of BCI
Worst BestWorst Best
U.S. Economy Today
Worst Best
IT Industry Today Your Company Today
Net Negative Net Positive
Q4 ‘12 71% 29%
Q2 ’14 50% 50%
Net Negative Net Positive
Q4 ‘12 33% 67%
Q2 ’14 25% 75%
Net Negative Net Positive
Q4 ‘12 31% 69%
Q2 ’14 31% 69%
midpoint midpoint midpoint
Distribution of opinions about the economy, the IT industry and respondent’s firm.Q2 ‘14Q4 ‘12
The Q2 2014
line indicates a
shift towards
more positive
sentiment
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
5. IT Industry Executives Express a Number of “Keep You
Awake at Night” Concerns
5%
9%
15%
22%
23%
23%
23%
25%
32%
35%
40%
49%
Weak export market
Input/commodity price inflation
Access to credit/capital
Competition from new firms entering our space
Labor costs/availability of skilled workers
Lengthy sales cycles
Disruptive technologies or business models
General lack of confidence/paralysis
IT industry squeezed by decreasing margins
Unexpected shock (e.g. financial or Intl crisis, etc.)
Government regulation and/or gridlock in Washington
Price sensitive customers hesitant to spend
Access to credit/capital has
improved, but is still a serious
concern among the smallest
of firms (33% vs. 15% overall)
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
6. Concerns Roughly Unchanged During Past 3 Quarters
3%
6%
12%
20%
27%
24%
15%
26%
30%
32%
42%
49%
5%
9%
15%
22%
23%
23%
23%
25%
32%
35%
40%
49%
Weak export market
Input/commodity price inflation
Access to credit/capital
Competition from new firms entering our space
Labor costs/availability of skilled workers
Lengthy sales cycles
Disruptive technologies or business models
General lack of confidence/paralysis
IT industry squeezed by decreasing margins
Unexpected shock (e.g. financial or Intl crisis, etc.)
Government regulation and/or gridlock in Washington
Price sensitive customers hesitant to spend
Q2 2014
Q4 2013
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
The biggest change
since Q4 comes in the
area of concern over
disruption (+8 points)
7. 25%
42%
33%
Fully staffed; no hiring plans
Fully staffed, but want to hire in order to expand
Understaffed
IT Firms Grapple with Understaffing
10%
12%
5%
6%
by 5% by 10% by 15% by 20%
Degree to which IT Firms are Understaffed
To put into context, an IT firm with 100
employees reporting understaffing of 10%
is short 10 workers.
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
8. Strategies Used to Manage Understaffing Challenges
14%
18%
19%
20%
27%
32%
50%
Partnering with other firms to offset
staffing or skills shortages
Outsourcing more tasks or entire functions
Automating more tasks or functions through technology
Postponing or canceling projects
Using more contract or temporary workers
Re-deploying staff from lower priority projects to
higher priority projects
Requiring workers to put in more time on the job
Text
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
9. 52%
48%
Yes No
Half of All IT Companies Report Having Job Openings
18%
47%
75% 76%
Micro
firms
Small
firms
Medium
firms
Large
firms
Segmentation of Incidence of Current Job
Openings that Need to be Filled
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
10. 11%
9%
12%
15%
19%
23%
28%
29%
33%
39%
48%
Other
Social media expertise
Inside sales staff
Marketing staff
Consultative sales staff
Project managers
Security expertise
Network engineers
Cloud expertise
Application developers
Technicians or IT support/service
Most IT Firms’ Skills/Job Roles Needs Skew
Toward Technical Positions
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
11. Segmentation of IT Firms’ Skills/Job Roles Needs
Overall
Micro IT
Firms
Small IT
Firms
Medium IT
Firms
Large IT
Firms
Technicians or IT support/service 48% 42% 42% 54% 57%
Application developers 39% 24% 44% 40% 48%
Cloud expertise 33% 22% 29% 37% 45%
Network engineers 29% 17% 27% 42% 35%
Security expertise 28% 20% 16% 31% 47%
Project managers 23% 9% 26% 33% 28%
Consultative sales staff 19% 20% 29% 13% 13%
Marketing staff 15% 28% 9% 17% 6%
Inside sales staff 12% 16% 13% 12% 8%
Social media expertise 9% 15% 8% 6% 6%
Other 11% 10% 13% 10% 9%
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
Micro firm = 1-9 employees Medium firm = 100-499 employees
Small firm = 10-99 employees Large firms = 500+ employees
12. Finding Workers with the Right Set of Skills/Experience
8%
26%
40%
20%
6%
5%
10%
29%
47%
10%
Not at all challenging
Not that challenging
Somewhat challenging
Challenging
Very challenging
Technical positions Non-technical positions
Average Time to Fill
Technical Positions*
28% Less than 2 months
34% 2-3 months
14% 4-5 months
9% 6 months+
A NET 57% of firms indicate challenges in hiring technical workers vs. 26% for non-technical workers (e.g. marketing, sales, etc.)
*Don’t know response not shown
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
13. Tactics Employed by IT Firms to Fill Job Openings
30%
47%
50%
61%
68%
68%
Visiting job fairs or university career events
to find candidates
Using a recruiter to find candidate(s)
Recruiting via social networks, such as LinkedIn
Postings job opening(s) to job boards, such as
CareerBuilder, Monster, etc.
Posting job opening(s) to company website
Soft recruiting, such as employee referrals
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
14. Key Summary Points
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
• CompTIA’s IT Industry Business Confidence Index maintained its momentum, inching ahead 1.1 points. The 3-variable index
recorded a rating of 61.3 on a 100-point scale. The forward-looking component of the index is projected to increase 2.7
points, signaling the likelihood of further strengthening of business confidence over the next six months.
• Despite the positive trending and economic tailwinds, IT industry executives express a number of concerns. At the top of the
“keep you awake at night list” is concern over price sensitive customers reluctant to spend. This could be, for example,
customers in industry sectors that are still lagging in the recovery, or customers still in cost-cutting mode and reluctant to
invest in technology. Similarly, executives express concern about downward pressure on margins. Among the smallest of
companies, access to credit/capital is a relatively more pressing issue (33% vs. 15% overall).
• With a reasonably stable economy, firms are better positioned to hire. According the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the
unemployment rate stands at 6.7% - still high by historical standards, but much improved since the double-digit rate of a few
years ago. Among IT firms, the data suggests a significant number have pent up demand. One in three firms report being
understaffed to some degree, with a segment short 20% of their ideal staff size.
• Over half of the IT firms in the CompTIA study report having at least one job opening. Large and medium size companies are
most likely to have openings, with small and micro size firms to a slightly lesser degree. The top three positions/job roles
most want to fill include: technicians/service staff, application developers/programmers and cloud computing positions. For
most firms, technical positions are the priority, with non-technical positions such as sales or marketing staff, generally a
secondary need.
• For many firms the hiring environment presents a range of challenges – a net 57% of IT industry executives rate it
challenging/very challenging. This may stem from a limited pool of candidates, candidates lacking the desired
skills/experience, mismatches in salary requirements or simply the wrong fit. Twenty-three percent of firms say it takes on
average 4 or months to fill certain technical positions.
15. Summary of Indicators
Economy According to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the U.S. economy grew by 1.9 percent in 2013, down from a 2.8 rate in 2012. Looking
ahead, the IMF projects growth of 2.8 percent for the U.S. in 2014. In comparison, the group expects global GDP growth to approach 3.7
percent, driven primarily by growth in Asian economies as well as the Middle East and Africa.
IT Industry Gartner recently updated its 2014 global IT industry growth forecast, increasing it slightly to 3.2 percent, from 3.1 percent. Gartner cited
strong growth in software and IT services as key contributors to IT industry performance for the year.
In January 2014, CompTIA released its annual IT industry forecast. CompTIA’s consensus forecast projected a growth rate of 3.0 percent for
the U.S. IT industry in 2014, with upside potential of 5.4 percent.
Employment According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), the U.S. unemployment rate for March 2014 held at 6.7 percent. While the
unemployment rate has steadily decreased, labor force participation remains historically low at 63.2 percent. To put into context, the rate
today stands at roughly the same point as 1979.
Compared to the national unemployment rate, the rate for computer related occupations remains very low. For March, the rate dipped to
2.8 percent, down nearly half a percentage point from the same period a year ago. See CompTIA’s IT Employment Snapshot for more
details on IT employment trends.
During Q1 2014 there were 589,205 core IT job openings in the U.S., according to Burning Glass Technologies Labor Insights.
Stock Market The Vanguard Information Technology ETF (a mix of publicly traded hardware, software, IT services and telecom firms) increased 26.96
percent for the 12-month period March to March. In comparison, the S&P 500 increased 21.86 percent over the same period.
Confidence The Index of Small Business Optimism jumped 2 points in March, according to the National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB).
The ISM Services Index, a measure of activity within the broad services sector of the U.S. economy, increased during March, but fell short
of expectations. The index recorded a rating of 53.1, up from 51.6 in February. The March reading marked the 51st straight month the
index was above 50; however, the index is still well off its 7-year high of 57.9.
The Conference Board's March Consumer Confidence Index release showed an increase nearly 4 percentage points to 82.3. According to
the Conference Board “consumers were moderately more upbeat about future job prospects and the overall economy, but less optimistic
about income growth.”
Note: Confidence indexes are very time sensitive and can fluctuate significantly from week to week. Factors such as gridlock in Washington,
international events or stock market volatility can quickly turn positive sentiment negative.
16. About This Research
Source: CompTIA IT Industry Business Confidence Index, Q2 2014 | Base: n=305 IT industry executives
28% Executive Management (CEO, President, Owner, etc.)
5% Senior Management – IT function (CIO, CSO, VP, etc.)
7% Senior Management – business function (CFO, VP, etc.)
18% Middle Management – IT function (Director, Mgr, Team Leader etc.)
15% Middle Management – business (Director, Mgr, Team Leader etc.)
8% Staff level – IT function
3% Staff level – business function
9% IT Consultant
6% Business Consultant
13% IT solution provider
18% Software vendor, developer, ISV, SaaS provider
17% IT or business consulting
9% IT support or repair services
7% Managed services provider
8% Hardware vendor, manufacturer or developer
6% Reseller/VAR
3% Systems/network integrator
6% Telecom or communications services
5% Distributor, value added distributor or retailer
7% Other type of IT firm
29% Less than 10 employees
25% 10 to 99 employees
17% 100 to 499 employees
29% 500 or more employees
Participant Job Title
Participant Business Type
Firm Revenue
This quantitative study consisted of an online survey fielded to
IT industry executives and professionals during early April 2014.
CompTIA’s IT Industry Business Confidence Index is published at
the beginning of each quarter. A total of 305 IT companies
participated in the survey, yielding an overall margin of
sampling error at 95% confidence of +/- 5.7 percentage points.
Sampling error is larger for subgroups of the data.
As with any survey, sampling error is only one source of possible
error. While non-sampling error cannot be accurately
calculated, precautionary steps were taken in all phases of the
survey design, collection and processing of the data to minimize
its influence.
CompTIA is a member of the Marketing Research Association
and abides by its guidelines for survey best practices and
research ethics. CompTIA is responsible for all content
contained in this report.
This study and all CompTIA research is one way in which the
association re-invests resources in the IT channel. As the voice
of the IT industry, CompTIA has hundreds of tools, market
intelligence reports and business training programs to help IT
channel organizations grow through education, certification,
advocacy and philanthropy. The full report is available at no cost
to CompTIA members to help them develop and hone their
business plans.
Visit www.comptia.org or contact research@comptia.org for
more information.
Methodology