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BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT. Agenda. 01 The Chartered Institute for IT, Professionalism and the Challenge for IT Professionals 02 Membership – Main reasons for joining? 03 What’s in it for you, as a Student?. 01.
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Agenda • 01 The Chartered Institute for IT, Professionalism and the Challenge for IT Professionals • 02 Membership – Main reasons for joining? • 03 What’s in it for you, as a Student? Student Presentation 2010/11
01 The Chartered Institute for IT, Professionalism and the Challenge for IT Professionals Student Presentation 2010/11
What is a professional body? ‘a not-for-profit organisation seeking to further a particular profession, the interests of individuals engaged in that profession, and the public interest.’ • To establish a Code of Conduct • To share knowledge of new developments and good practice • To set standards of education, skills and experience • To advise government Student Presentation 2010/11
A Definition of Professionalism • PROFESSIONAL - “of or belonging to a profession ....... involving training....... showing appropriate skill ........ maintaining properstandards....... competent .... expert.....” Student Presentation 2010/11
What does Professionalism look like? Professionalism is further defined for an individual as being all of the below: • Member of a professional body • Signed up to a code of conduct • Committed to continuous professional development • Qualified • Demonstrates trusted competence • Medicine, Accountancy, Civil Engineering require practitioners to be members of their Professional body in order to practice – Why not IT? Student Presentation 2010/11
About BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT • Formed in 1957 • Received its Royal Charter in 1984 • International awarding body for qualifications – Accredits University degrees, ISEB practitioner qualifications and sets it’s own academic Higher Education Qualification (HEQ) • Around 70,000 members in over 100 countries • The only awarding body for Chartered IT Professional (CITP) status • Route to Chartered Engineer (CEng) and Chartered Scientist (CSci) • UK’s leading professional body for those working in IT • Promotes wider social and economic progress through the advancement of information technology, science and practice. Student Presentation 2010/11
What tasks does the Chartered Institute for IT perform? • Works with Stakeholders • Sets standards for education & training • Advances & disseminates knowledge • Monitors professional conduct • Provides services to members • Recognises achievement • Represents the profession on issues of importance • Offers members opportunities for networking both inside & outside the UK Student Presentation 2010/11
Our strategy and 5 pillars Championing the global IT profession Our mission To enable the information society Our vision To be a world-class organisation for IT Giving practitioners the professional development and career support they deserve Bridging the gap between education practice and research Informing public policy on how IT can contribute to society Ensuring everyone benefits from IT 9 9 Student Presentation 2010/11 Presentation to insert name here BCS Staff Event 2009
The IT Profession Past Technical solution provider Present IT (Information and Technology) doesn’t just support business - it powers business Future A business focussed profession, with a base of both technical and business competencies; a transformation partner with business Student Presentation 2010/11
The IT Profession Today • Change is the only constant factor • Pressures on costs & revenues • Intensive Competition • Markets are Global, Location Independent & Customer Focused • Customers are more demanding • Increasing range of technical related opportunities • IT is essential to compete Student Presentation 2010/11
IT Industry Performance - last two decades OASIG • 80-90% of IT investments do not meet their performance objectives • 80% of new systems are delivered late and over budget • 40% of projects abandoned as system failures Standish • *31% of projects cancelled before completion • 88% of projects exceed deadline, budget or both • For every 100 starts, there are94 restarts • Average cost overrun – 189% • Average schedule overrun – 222% * IT Project Management : On Track from Start to Finish Joseph Philips ( McGraw Hill ) Would failure in 4 out of 10 bridge building projects be acceptable? Student Presentation 2010/11
Business Project Failures Is the project manageable from the point of view of IT department? Student Presentation 2010/11
Is the IT professional in the board room? Production Sales Finance + IT Student Presentation 2010/11
The need for Increased IT Professionalism? Student Presentation 2010/11
Why is it important for the IT profession? Headlines from Computer Weekly • IT at biology’s frontiers • In less than 10 years IT has gone from being a valuable tool for life sciences to being at the heart of some of the most important research projects ever undertaken. • Mining data from the human genome requires massive computing power • Chemical equivalent of the genome project is producing another data mountain Go green with software Organisations are looking to software to help them meet their environmental commitments Computers to harness speed of light Scientists aim to speed information processing by using light waves Future optical computers will provide more processing power and higher speed IT helps restore Lehman UK If separating the IT systems is successful, Nomura will be able to run Lehman Brothers UK as a standalone entity at a significantly lower cost than when it was Lehman Brothers’ UK entity Student Presentation 2010/11
Technology is increasingly at the heart of business Groceries to customer’s door, real knowledge of customers; real time delivery.. WH Smith and Amazon.. Collaborative working... VISA, MasterCard Student Presentation 2010/11
Impact of Government Spending Review October 2010 • In UK and other major economies IT projects are being cut from government spending. The UK Chancellor, George Osborne, announced a £3bn cut: • £1.7 billion will be directly cut from 'IT programmes, suppliers and property'. • A further £1.15 billion will come from discretionary spending, including IT consultancy. • £80 million is to be saved with the closure of the British Educational Communications and Technology Agency (BECTA). • Not all about cuts - The UK Government has sought partners in order to implement their G-Cloud ‘cloud computing’ initiative which is aimed at saving Government £13.2bn over the next few years. • Present knock-on effect is that there are around 69 graduates applying for every advertised IT role • ICT Industry makes a £71 Billion (8.4%) annual Gross Value Added (GVA) contribution to UK PLC (Technology Counts 2010) Student Presentation 2010/11
The challenge for IT professionals new to the IT profession The challenge is to: • Find out what working in Technology really means: • Maximise the dividends of successful IT enabled innovation for business growth • Exploit the potential of the technology to increase the ability to compete and meet customer expectations • Find out what skills and qualities are required and looked for by recruiters – ‘soft’ skills and technical • It’s not enough to be technically aware, must also improve commercial awareness Student Presentation 2010/11
02 Membership – Main reasons for joining? Student Presentation 2010/11
BCS Membership categories Ordinary Grades: Student membership - the grade for those on a course of IT related study Associate membership (letters after your name of AMBCS) - a first step to Professional membership Professional Grades: Professional membership (MBCS) - requires 5+ years’ experience dependent on qualifications Fellowship - our most senior grade for IT professionals Chartered Status: Chartered IT Professional status (CITP) - The benchmark of IT Excellence. Other registrations: Chartered Engineer (CEng), Incorporated Engineer (IEng) and Chartered Scientist (CSci) Student Presentation 2010/11
Skills Framework for the Information Age SFIA & SFIAplus 4 “In terms of relevant scope and geographical uptake, we have found nothing similar to SFIAplus.” Daryl Beck Director of IT Academy, Unilever ISM industry structure model Student Presentation 2010/11
How SFIA works • The SFIA framework provides a clear model for describing what IT practitioners and users do. • It is constructed as a two-dimensional matrix describing categories of work on one axis and levels of responsibility on another. • There are six main categories of work: • Strategy and architecture • Business change • Solution development and implementation • Service Management • Procurement and management support • Client Interface • These categories are sub-categorised and divided into 86 specific skills. Student Presentation 2010/11
How SFIA works • seven levels of responsibility: • Follow • Assist (≈Associate AMBCS grade) • Apply (≈Professional MBCS grade) • Enable • Ensure, advise (≈Chartered CITP status) • Initiate, influence • Set strategy, inspire, mobilise (≈Fellowship FBCS grade) • These responsibility levels are measured by pre-defined areas of work: Degree of Autonomy, Complexity, Business Skills and Influence • There are 290 competencies called ‘tasks’. . Student Presentation 2010/11
SFIAplus Summary • Benefits of SFIAplus: • Enables you to benchmark your IT skills against the standards defined by the IT industry • Describes IT skills in a common language and a logical structure • Helps determine the skills required Student Presentation 2010/11
An overview of Membership • > 70k Members • 84% are based in the UK • 84% / 16% male / female ratio • 72% are Chartered or Professional Members Student Presentation 2010/11
An overview of Membership • Average age is 35 • 70% pay out of their own pocket • 77% think it is good or excellent VFM • 83% are satisfied with Membership • 67% feel it has helped with their job • Generates 20% of the Institute’s income Student Presentation 2010/11
Why do Members join? • Professional recognition – 67% • Professional development – 14% • Member benefits and services – 10% Source – From 10,300 BCS Members respondents to Survey in Nov 2009 Student Presentation 2010/11
03 What’s in it for you, as a Student? Student Presentation 2010/11
Why should Students join BCS? “Our goal is to continue toattract and retain the highest calibre IT professionalsand help them through their professional development. We continue to share BCS’ goal and vision for the future and believe that well equipped, highly motivated and industry aware professionals are the key to future success” Ian Tufts, Head of Research and Development, Sage (UK) Ltd Student Presentation 2010/11
Why should Students join BCS? Access the resources, skills and opportunities to help with your studies and develop your future career • Demonstrates your commitment to the IT profession • Shows you are serious about your career development • Sets you apart • Enables you to keep up-to-date with industry developments • Huge range of member services and benefits Student Presentation 2010/11
Student membership benefits • Networking: • Access to top people and latest thinking • Dedicated Young Professionals Group • Online Member Network • 40 UK Branches and 45 Specialist Groups • 17 International Sections Free online library full of knowledge and best practice: • Books 24x7: 250 top IT and business related eBooks • Forrester reports: up to 3 IT related research reports each month • EBSCO: IT research database, with over 9000 academic journals and magazines Student Presentation 2010/11
Student membership benefits cont. • Other Knowledge Services: • e newsletters (including eBCS Student) • Latest Industry news • Events, seminars and job opportunities • Gadget reviews • Free subscriptions to Computing and Globalization Today (digital versions) • Member magazine ITNOW • Career Development: • Map your career and discover the skills you need • Plan the training and development you need • Get advice on writing CVs and letters and interview techniques • BCSrecruit - Access thousands of the latest IT jobs viawww.BCSrecruit.com Student Presentation 2010/11
Student membership benefits cont. Discounts • Leading software from Microsoft and AVG • Custom PC magazine • BCS Online bookshop Student Presentation 2010/11
ROI Individuals with professional qualifications and membership stand to gain £152,000 in additional earnings over the course of their careers* Members of Professional Bodies earn an estimated 17% premium over their working life** Sources….. *CMI and **Consultative Committee for Professional Management Organisations Student Presentation 2010/11
Potential worth Professional recognition £10,000s to £100,000s Career development & opportunities £10,000s Benefits and services £1000s Legal help £50/hr + Events £100s Publications £100 + Discounts on software, training and books £100s Research reports £1000s Professional Indemnity Insurance discount £110 to £170 ROI Student Presentation 2010/11
An important question Does the Institute serve Members? or do they serve it? Student Presentation 2010/11
Both Student Presentation 2010/11
How do you make the most of BCS Membership? Student Presentation 2010/11
The short answer … It all depends on what you make of it! Student Presentation 2010/11
Be part of the solution • Raise awareness • Network • Participate • Encourage others • Learn new things • Take advantage Student Presentation 2010/11
Join today • For more information and to apply: • go to www.bcs.org/student • obtain an application form from your University/College • Membership fee: £25 for 1 year (48p per week) or £40 for full course (19p per week) • (That’s the price of just one good meal out!) Student Presentation 2010/11
Thanks and any questions? Student Presentation 2010/11