Intelligent Tech Channels Issue 09 | Page 24

FUTURE TECHNOLOGY S kills shortage is one of the major challenges when it comes to the latest trends such as the Internet of Things (IoT) and software-defined networking. In order to capitalise on these technologies, enterprises will need well- trained and skilled staff. Cisco predicts that approximately 220,000 new engineers will be needed globally every year for the next 10 years to keep up with the technological surge of the Internet of Everything (IoE). Professionals with skills in the areas of IT security, IoT, mobility, cloud, virtualisation, software-defined networking and software-defined datacentres are currently in great demand. This is a gap that must be filled if the potential of IoE is to be realised. For partners to be successful in this area, they need to play key roles in defining, selling, deploying and optimising these megatrends that will deliver business outcomes and meet customer needs. Vendor certifications reflect the breadth of the channel partners’ skills across certain technologies. Explains Shadi Salama, Channel Leader, Cisco Middle East, “Cisco fully believes that its channel partners should be trained and certified to gain a competitive advantage. Training staff is not as challenging as retaining them once they have attained the vendor’s certifications. The constraints tend to be financial as training in the latest technologies can be costly. Additionally, training facilities are limited due to the lack of skilled ICT consultants in the region,” continues Salama. A total of 65 per cent of global IT leaders report a skills shortage holding them back, up from 59 per cent last year. The IT skills gap is a major challenge facing the IT training sector as well. In a recent study, 92 per cent of students reported more successful IT projects involving Red Hat technologies after they took the training. In other words, Red Hat Training helps Red Hat end users maximise their return on technology investments. “This gap, together with non- authorised training in the region, can represent an inhibitor for 24 Training staff is not as challenging as retaining them once they have attained the vendor’s certifications. training partners and a big risk for our customers. Lack of trained and skilled IT professionals can be a major disadvantage for today’s IT companies. Together with our partners, we need to create awareness around the value and importance of the authorised Red Hat Training and Certification, and how it lets our customers acquire new skills or sharpen existing ones, perform better and increase productivity,” says Hesham Abdel Mohsen, Business Development Manager, Middle East, Turkey and Africa, Red Hat Training. Digital driver Middle East organisations are increasingly reliant on advanced technical skills, but there is a major mismatch between the current level of talent and the skills needed by 2020. For example, 64 per cent of respondents in a global study, carried out by the Technical University of Munich and SAP, felt that their company’s personnel did not possess the skills necessary for successful digital transformation. Finding the right channel partners who have the right skills and certification is one of the biggest challenges facing the growth of SAP’s PartnerEdge programme. “We need the right partners who are specialised in specific industry verticals or in the specific SAP cloud-based solutions, such as the in-memory SAP HANA platform, SAP S4HANA real-time business suite, or the SAP Leonardo digital innovation system,” says Marita Mitschein, Senior Vice President and Managing Director, SAP Training and Development Institute, SAP Middle East and North Africa. According to Meena Confait, Head of Skills for Africa at SAP Africa, this year features participation of partners and customers from Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda and Rwanda. “In 2013 and 2014, we provided training for 130 graduates in Kenya. In our expanded 2017 programme, we are able to train 55 candidates of which 40 per cent are female.” While planning its annual channel training calendar, Aruba HPE typically does an assessment of its partner resources, according to Ahmed Rezk, Channel Systems Engineer Manager at Aruba, HPE. With the mobility and security vendor putting increased focus on the enterprise digital workplace, channel partners also need to be competent on providing additional ecosystem technologies that will enable the digital workplace, meeting the full solution requirements of its end customers. Aruba HPE provides direct touch training engagement with its channel partners focused on the enterprise, as well as value added distributors, around compliance and competency. Value added distributors in turn are responsible for bridging partnership and certification gaps in channel partners focused on the small and medium business sector. For data availability vendor, Veeam Software, digital transformation is a driver for partner training. As enterprises embark on digital transformation initiatives, the availability of data becomes essential for their livelihoods. Not being able to access critical information puts an organisation at a distinct disadvantage over competitors. The always-on enterprise is going to require data-savvy specialists to empower businesses to grow to the next level. “We continuously work with partners to skill them up and enable them to progress to the next partner status where they can leverage more benefits. However, their progress is dependent on the investment from their side. We see our partners as an extension of our own sales team and work very closely with them to equip them with Issue 09 INTELLIGENT TECH CHANNELS