Software companies Xero and Orion Health say they will be
able to absorb at least some of the skilled workers who are
set to lose their jobs at Telecom.
NZX-listed Xero, which makes cloud-based accounting software,
is looking to hire about 100 people presently, chief
executive Rod Drury said this morning.
Telecom, on the other hand, is looking to downsize and is not
ruling out slashing 1000 jobs as it seeks to reduce its
costs.
Asked if Xero would be able to absorb some of the skilled
workers who could be cut from Telecom, Drury replied:
"Absolutely, I think there's an opportunity there."
Although there was not much demand for workers in senior
roles, the company is looking for mid-level marketers as well
as software developers, he said.
Orion Health chief executive Ian McCrae also said the company
could take on some of the skilled Telecom workers.
"At lot of the project work we're doing in many countries
around the world, US, Canada and elsewhere, we do the work
remotely and much of it is now being done in New Zealand," he
said.
McCrae said Orion was constantly on the look out for project
managers, business analysts and consultants.
If workers move from a utility organisation like Telecom to
an exporter like Orion, McCrae said it was arguably a
positive reallocation of people.
"We're creating wealth for the country," he said.
Orion, which currently has 750 people, is expected to hire at
least 150 to 200 people over the next 12 months.
"Our preference these days is to locate those people in New
Zealand," he said.
The Business Herald reported last Friday that a chronic
shortage of ICT skills is forcing software companies to carry
out development overseas because they can't find local
programmers to do the work.
With one website showing 1300 ICT vacancies in Auckland
alone, pay rates of up to $1500 a day are being offered for
some specialist roles.
Labour's communications and information technology
spokeswoman, Clare Curran, said yesterday that Telecom was
set to announce up to 1500 job cuts and that many of these
"highly-skilled individuals would flee to Australia".
"These jobs are going because there is no economic plan.
Steven Joyce even admitted today that economic plans don't
create jobs, we know for a fact his half-baked Business
Growth Agenda doesn't," she said.
Curran said a source had told her that Telecom would make the
cuts this month and research from the Parliamentary Library
showed it could add up to being the country's largest loss of
jobs from a single company.
Telecom boss Simon Moutter said last month that job cuts
could run "well into their hundreds" and would not rule out
more than 1000 positions going as the company looked to
reduce costs.
Moutter said yesterday there was "no new news" on the job
cuts and referred all further questions to general manager of
corporate relations Andrew Pirie.
"We always said [cuts] well into the hundreds, we never sort
of said a few hundred. We made it quite clear it was a higher
number than that. And that's our position," Pirie said.
The company could not yet say how many jobs would go.
The Herald understands cuts are likely to be a mix of
compulsory and voluntary redundancies, along with
non-replacement of departing staff.
Asked which areas of the company would be affected, Moutter
said last month: "There is no area of the business which has
not been asked to look very hard at everything we do to make
sure we remove the legacy culture, the layers of middle
management, the duplication of effort."
Telecom said last week it would axe about 120 jobs from the
Australian arm of its information technology unit, Gen-i,
leaving 60 people servicing and attracting transtasman
corporate customers.
At December 30, Telecom had 7530 staff, Pirie said. Six and a
half thousand workers were based in New Zealand, he said, the
remainder across the Tasman.
Telecom's share price closed down 3c yesterday at $2.225.
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