Really, a salary increase? Are you kidding me?
For IT staffers everywhere, their jobs are like life during wartime. Layoffs mean the body count is falling precipitously. Sysadmins are keeping their heads down in hopes that no one notices theyre drawing a salary. A steady drumbeat of grim news casts a pall over datacenters everywhere.
Forget a salary boost. The optimists are dreaming of simple survival.
Yet theres that sunny report from Computer Economics. The firm projects that median pay for IT professionals will rise about 2 percent in the stormy year of 2009. Even more surprising, certain fortunate groups, namely execs, directors, managers, and developers, will enjoy a 2 to 3 percent boost.
(If you really want to bathe in optimism, think of this: with inflation supposedly flat, or even declining, the two percent is a real increase.)
The IT salary graph looks like this:

And here are the increases by IT sector:

The rosy salary stats from Computer Economics agree with the upbeat outlook of Robert Half, which also projects an IT salary boost in 2009. Yet they disagree with the sober forecast of Janco Associates. Published in Jan 09, the Janco IT salary survey indicates that IT wages will fall modestly in this dark year.
Bear in mind that both the Robert Half and the Computer Economics surveys were conducted before Jancos. The Half survey was published in November 2008, presumably using data gathered through the year, and Computer Economics survey was conducted in October 2008. Since Jancos is the most recent, that may explain its more pessimistic take.
Hoping for a burst of sunshine, I called John Longwell, director of research at Computer Economics. So, I asked, your numbers are higher than Jancos. Tell me that this good news is for real.
Longwell put todays IT salaries in perspective in a way that was neither all gloom or overly sanguine.
The slightly higher salary numbers reflect the fact that, despite headlines, the vast majority of IT staffers remain employed. IT employers are not going to slash peoples salaries in a recession, he says, perhaps a tad optimistically.
But they may be hiring people on if theyre doing any hiring at all maybe at a lower rate. Although these new workers may be making slightly less, plenty of existing IT professionals are hanging on to salary levels attained in the brief period between the last recession and this one.
And in good times and bad, employers covet solid IT talent. Companies, if they can, theyre still going to want to give that annual raise to their good employees, even if it is two percent, Longwell says.
The median IT salary resists change. The median salary doesnt move that greatly from year to year, Longwell says. A year from now it may be lower but its not going to be lower by a lot.
By the way, heres a look at some typical U.S. median salaries as computed by Computer Economics:
Service Desk Manager: $77,270
Network Administrator II: $59,281
Unix System Administrator III: $89,360
Help Desk Representative I: $39,773
Senior Applications Architect : $96,219
Application Programmer III : $76,223
Another fact that keeps the median IT salary figures steady: IT salary forecasts, whether upbeat or downbeat, essentially ignore the legions of laid off workers. Since axed workers paychecks are (unfortunately) eliminated, they are not included in the median salary computations.
As Longwell explains, employers could be laying off people and giving raises.
Next Page: Remaining IT workers better paid?