Tech IT Easy

May 1, 2007

Most wanted IT trainings

Filed under: .NET (C#), Business intelligence, Business strategy, CIO, Consulting, ERP, Education, Europe, IBM, Microsoft, Project Management, SME, Software, entrepreneurship, innovation, open-source — Jeremy Fain @ 4:15 pm

Syntec Informatique, a French independent IT professionals union, recently published the results of a poll it conducted amongst a significant sample of IT professionals (source: Syntec Croissance Editeurs, Collection Théma TIC, N°8, March 2007) regarding the technology trainings software developers at software publishers located in France are asking for. There you go with the results:

  1. .Net / C#: 48%
  2. J2EE / Java: 37%
  3. Open Source environments: 36%
  4. SOA architectures: 28%
  5. Oracle environments: 24%
  6. Websphere environments: 20%
  7. C++: 17%
  8. Other technologies: 12%

The report also provides many interesting figures, amongst which another set of data related to tech-related trainings wanted by sales people. 60% of sales reps @ software publishers in France want to learn about ‘technology in general’ (‘un vernis technologique supplémentaire’), 51% feel like learning about the .Net environment, and 30% of them look forward to learning about open source environments.

3 Comments »

  1. Oh waw, :) i’m getting there on the second and third. The first one, NO CHANCE IN HELL, HAIL MAC.

    Comment by mozey — May 1, 2007 @ 5:12 pm

  2. Hey Jeremy,
    Good idea to add a new redirection of your web site to “techiteasy.org”, but you can see with “wordpress” how to buy a new name to let displaying the “techiteasy.org” in the URL of the browser.

    Comment by josephcargo — May 1, 2007 @ 7:45 pm

  3. Hey Joseph> thanks man, I knew about that, but I just don’t want to let display techiteasy.org in the URL so far as it would mean losing my search engine rankings in a wink. But thanks for the tip anyways.

    Mozey> Good for you. You don’t know what you’re missing. Visual Studio is sincerely the best development environment I’ve ever come across.

    Comment by Jeremy Fain — May 1, 2007 @ 8:11 pm

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