In 2009, the job market will be full of contrasts: some industries will be eviscerated while others face shortages of workers. The good news is that despite the recession, there are still real jobs to be had. The bad news is that you may have to change fields to find one.
The trick to job hunting in 2009 will be to figure out how your skill-set can translate across industries, says Elaine Varelas, a managing partner at Boston-based outplacement firm Keystone Partners, so that you're not confined to searching one sector of the economy. "People are frustrated because it's taking them a while to assess the job market," she says. "They'll have to figure out other things they can Ð and want Ð to do." Successful job-seekers will be the ones who can figure out how to take skills learned in one kind of job and translate them into assets in others.
Here are the top eight areas where work can be found in 2009:
1) Nursing & Medical Services
Perhaps the best bet in 2009: Becoming a registered nurse or medical technician. With over 50,000 new nursing jobs to be created this year alone, med techs and nurses will have their pick of jobs and salaries, the latter averaging about $57,000 per year.
Social services jobs will see a boom too, as a swelling number of retirees check-in for medical care, says the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) report. But not all health care jobs will see equal growth. "The growth here will be more about the services and delivery people--nurses and technicians--than administrators," Varelas explains. "Hourly workers interested in changing roles should get into any role that services the elderly," she suggests.
2) Computing & Engineering
Computer-related jobs are projected to grow by more than 20 percent in the next decade, and 2009 will be no exception. Software engineering is particularly in demand, with network systems and data communications analysis also booming. These jobs also had some of the highest median salaries in 2006, according to the BLS, with computer software engineers earning a median income of $79,000 a year.
These positions are expected to grow at nearly double the rate of other types of jobs, but that won't last forever. "As the software industry matures, and as routine work is increasingly outsourced abroad," fewer computing jobs will be available in the next decade, the BLS notes.
But for now, technology workers are still in high demand, says Varelas. Most of the open positions will be found at smaller companies, where employers will be looking for a versatile, multi-faceted worker that can fill more than one role. "You have to be a business person who's also a tech person," to be an ideal candidate, Varelas explains. That could give an advantage to seasoned workers over recent grads.
3) Education
"To a great extent, education is recession proof," says Roy Krause, President and CEO of recruiting and staffing company Spherion. In 2009, roughly 38,000 of our economy's new jobs will be created in colleges and universities nationwide. As more students wait out the recession in college and graduate programs, the need for teachers, administrators, assistants and other staff will expand.
The demand for primary and secondary-school teachers will be booming as well. "There always seems to be a shortage there," says Krause. Some of the most in-demand teaching roles will prepare workers for the most in-demand jobs. "There are literally not enough educational programs to generate the volume of health-care workers we'll need," Varelas explains. As high schools and universities expand to meet demand for nurses, computer engineers and teachers, the demand for teachers and professors will grow commensurately.
Post-secondary teachers can expect a media salary of about $56,000, according to the BLS, while kindergarten through 12th grade teachers can expect between $43,000 and $48,000.
4) Green Jobs
So-called "green" jobs haven't been measured in BLS reports to date, but some experts have predicted they'll shake up the list of the fastest-growing jobs before the end of the decade. "More and more companies are adding dedicated staff to focus their environmental efforts," says Alison Doyle, About.com's Guide to Job Searching. Green jobs are arriving in two breeds, she explains: some will be at specialized firms that reduce human environmental impact, like environmental consultancies; others will simply be jobs at environmentally-friendly companies looking to improve their eco-image by hiring specialized "green" officers to audit and improve the company's environmental impact.
Recent Comments | 5 Total
March 5, 2009 at 12:27pm by Koblak Roonnaphai
Useful Information!
May 6, 2009 at 4:25pm by Carolina Reyna
Here are some shortcuts to searches on our new job search engine which aggregates listings from around the web (some of your top areas are pretty hard to pin down, for example infrastructure jobs would be quite difficult to do a search for):work at home jobs, nursing jobs, medical jobs, software jobs, environmental jobs, energy jobs, engineering jobs, finance jobs.
There is definitely a big mismatch now in terms of the number of people wanting these "top areas" and the number of employers looking to fill positions in them... -Carol
May 27, 2009 at 2:04pm by Eric Shannon
One of the things making it difficult to land a job today is that more and more people are searching in the same places. Yes, you should use one of the largest general-purpose job boards and a job search engine. But, if you are looking for something harder to find, don't forget about the established niche job boards - the 2009 guide to the top 100 job site niches may be helpful locating the right ones. It relies on my 12 years of experience running a top niche job board and dozens of hours of research.
Eric Shannon
President, LatPro, Inc.
LatPro.com | DiversityJobs.com
June 23, 2009 at 12:40am by Alexis Monroe
This is a great article. I've talked with a lot of smart and optimistic professionals who have used this economy as a chance to grow, a few of them really hunkering down and obtaining a masters or exploring other skills. If you work at it, you may be better off when the economy starts to improve! http://www.steveandalexis.worldventures.biz/
July 2, 2009 at 2:09pm by Glenn Friesen
Phenomenal list. Good to see green and telecommuting on the list (both environmentally friendly, and more efficient paradigms).
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Luck is the Residue of Design.
http://glennfriesen.com