I remember the Dot-Com Boom and the Dot-Com Bust.  It wasn’t that long ago. The Dot-Com Boom didn’t last that long.  During the boom good people were hard to find.  Even those who hardly fogged the mirror wanted much more money than they were worth.  However that came to an end and people were on the street and unemployment rose dramatically.

I won’t ever forget the Great Recession.  It had lasted much longer that the Dot-Com Boom.

But things are getting better.  Many LinkedIn Discussions on the groups I belong to have significantly more jobs postings than they did a few years ago. Immediate opening they say.  The same sense of urgency as DR TV.

I was recently recruiting a JAVA Developer for a local digital firm. Six figure salary. Could work remotely.  Could I find JAVA Developers?  Sure.  But it was very tough to find JAVA Developers that weren’t working.  Most were happy and content where they were. It is a great time to be working in a profession when there are more jobs than people. Supply and demand still apply today.

I found the same demand recently when I was looking for a Technical Producer.  Most people available wanted much more money that the position offered.

I am a little worried for JAVA Developers in that many of them had a poor presence on LinkedIn. They aren’t really for the future.  Instant trouble if things change and the past decade have shown us that things change often and rapidly. But Americans are famous for one thing.  A short memory.

I hope that one day they aren’t at the networking meetings where many talented people in transition are still relatively easy to find.  They would love to be hired but they are invisible to many of the people making the hiring decisions in their skill set. I have seen too much of that.

So how do you find the jobs that will be in high demand in the future?  Well you have to be astute enough to predict where the world is going.  It isn’t always modeling on just what are high demand jobs of today.  It isn’t found by looking only at what has worked in the past.

Things change. Even more rapidly in the New Normal.  It is all about the predicting what will be hot a few years from now and training for the future today.  Reading and following visionaries does help.  You may not of heard of Marshall McLuhan but he predicted a global village when the only people who had sushi lived in Japan.

Constant learning and reinvention also help but many people invest more time watching TV than growing themselves. It’s easier.  Change is hard even though it often pays the immediate benefit of the journey.

Some things are easier to see.  I believe that in advertising that technology is as valuable a product to a client as an ad. Venerated as much as the selection of the right type face or the selection an up and coming director in the past. Thus technology people will be increasing valuable.  Creative geeks will rule. Articulate ones will do better.   A client may even pay more for their services. Just like in the past when clients would pay for insights into consumers that often only agencies had. Everybody will always pay a little more for what they don’t know and want to have. And the people with that voice will be highly prized.

You can connect with Hank on LinkedIn:

http://www.linkedin.com/in/hankblankcom

Follow his updates on twitter: @hankblank

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Read Why Ad People Need to Market Themselves Better

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