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Want A Job? You Ought To Be A Tech Geek

On Jan. 18 in Columbia,  Mo., student developer Tony Brown holds an Apple iPhone 4 with the  NearBuy app he helped develop with three other University of Missouri students as part of a contest in 2008. The app earned them a  trip to Apple headquarters, along with job offers from Google and other  technology titans.
Patrick T. Fallon
/
AP
On Jan. 18 in Columbia, Mo., student developer Tony Brown holds an Apple iPhone 4 with the NearBuy app he helped develop with three other University of Missouri students as part of a contest in 2008. The app earned them a trip to Apple headquarters, along with job offers from Google and other technology titans.

The job market is struggling to recover from the Great Recession. But in the technology sector right now, it's opposite day. Undergrads have their pick of jobs, and companies are desperate to hire.

Dice.com, one of the leading employment sites in the tech sector, has 30 percent more job openings listed than last year, its vice president, Tom Silver, says. Unemployment for tech workers is 5.9 percent — significantly below January's overall 9 percent national rate.

Naturally, San Francisco is ground zero for this hiring increase. Jeff Winter, a recruiter there for high-end tech companies, just hired three people last week — to help him deal with the mounting requests from tech companies.

"I have right now on my desk 12 clients," he says, "with anywhere between six to 12 jobs apiece, it seems." His work is Sisyphean, really — so many more jobs are piling up for him to fill without a labor force to match, that it reminds him of 1999.

Then, the dot-com bubble created a labor shortage where companies couldn't find enough Web developers. Right now, companies can't find enough app developers.

If you can develop software applications for mobile devices, you're sitting pretty. Because this skill is relatively new — and changing all the time — it can be hard for companies to find people with the hot new talent that is suddenly indispensable.

Because of the labor shortage, companies do some pretty incredible acrobatics to attract good talent. That means it's a good time to be a graduating senior with a degree in computer science.

University of Maryland student Ederlyn Lacson interned at Microsoft last summer. At the end of the summer, she says, the tech giant had a private showing of Cirque du Solei — for the interns.

The company served "light snacks. And by light snacks, it was shrimp cocktail — the unending stream of shrimp cocktail," she recalls. Needless to say, Lacson took a job with Microsoft.

Her classmates got the same treatment. Ray Douglas will be working at the University of Maryland's research lab next year. The school offered him a salary in the $50,000 range. He just happened to mention to his boss the offers he had gotten from other firms — which were starting in the $70,000 and $80,000 range.

"And he said, 'OK, we'll beat that,' " Douglas said, peeking out from under his shaggy hair. "I was just asking him! I didn't think he was going to do it!"

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Zoe Chace explains the mysteries of the global economy for NPR's Planet Money. As a reporter for the team, Chace knows how to find compelling stories in unlikely places, including a lollipop factory in Ohio struggling to stay open, a pasta plant in Italy where everyone calls in sick, and a recording studio in New York mixing Rihanna's next hit.