Uptime Institute on Jan 26 announced the availability of its Global Data Center Staffing Forecast 2021-2025 report, billed as "the digital infrastructure industry's first comprehensive forecast of workforce needs — by region, by data center type, and by staff minimum education requirements."
As contended by the report's executive summary:
In every geographic region, data center capacity is dramatically expanding in a build-out of historic proportions. That requires people — to design, build and operate data centers. The availability (or lack) of specialist staff will be an increasing concern for all types of data centers, from mega-growth hyperscales to small, private enterprise facilities. By quantifying demand, this research will help raise awareness of the strong employment opportunities for job seekers and give employers, education institutions, and governments a way to measure the need for investment in workforce training and education.
Data center staff requirements are forecast by Uptime Institute to grow globally from about 2 million full-time employees in 2019 to nearly 2.3 million by 2025. Most demand is expected in the Asia-Pacific region, followed by North America, Europe, Middle East, and Africa.
Notably, in the large and mature data center markets of the U.S. and Western Europe, the research finds there is concern that many employees are due to retire about the same time, causing an additional surge in demand, especially for senior roles. This "silver tsunami" effect may last for the coming decade, states the research.
To create the forecast report, Uptime Institute Intelligence estimated demand for more than 230 specialist job roles (organized into nine job domains) needed to design, build, and operate data centers. Estimates are based on industry input and extensive expert advice from across Uptime Institute.
"This study helps us as an industry better understand the size and scope of the staffing challenge," said Rhonda Ascierto, vice president of research, Uptime Institute. "It is also a quantitative assessment of the long-term career opportunities available. This is a fast-growing and dynamic industry — and we need people from all backgrounds, all over the world."
Uptime Institute expects that the market's historic demand growth, as forecast, will mainly come from cloud and colocation data centers. Cloud data centers — either owned or leased by cloud/internet companies — will require the most staff, by a significant margin. Enterprise data centers are expected to continue to employ many staff, although the cloud workforce will surpass enterprise after 2025.
In terms of staffing requirements, the research states that most positions will require either a university/college or technical trade school degree or — critically — equivalent experience that can be substituted for a formal education. The report advises that employers should reevaluate their current job requirements to attract a wider pool of diverse talent, and notes that more education and training, including on-the-job, will be key to meeting future demand.
As noted by the report's summary:
Technical staff are notoriously difficult to recruit for data centers. Mechanical and electrical engineers in strategy and operations roles, and all types of controls and monitoring employees, are among the technical staff that will be increasingly needed through (at least) 2025.
On Wednesday, February 3rd at 9:00 AM Pacific time, a webinar on the report's findings will be presented by Uptime Institute's Rhonda Ascierto and guest speakers Heather Dooley, Head of Data Center Business Operations, Google Data Centers, and Nancy Novak, chief innovation officer, Compass Datacenters. You can register for the webinar here.
Learn more at http://www.uptimeinstitute.com.