Skills in programming languages such as Cobol, Fortran, PowerBuilder, and more don’t rate like they once did.
“Certainly the Cobol people that had a resurgence with the Y2K bug aren’t in demand,” says John Estes, vice president of strategic alliances of Robert Half Technology, an IT staffing consultancy. “Certain other applications such as Delphi and PowerBuilder, [which were] very big in the ’90s, are no longer in demand.”
IT work-force and compensation research conducted by Foote Partners revealed that Cobol, PowerBuilder and Jini noncertified skills were among the lowest-paying skills in the second half of 2007. David Foote, CEO and chief research officer at Foote Partners, says the research shows not that such skills aren’t in use today but that companies aren’t willing to pay for them. “There is still a lot of C and Cobol around, though these skills are worth very little paywise,” Foote says.


