Is IT a young person's game? The cliché that young IT pros have an edge because they've been trained on the latest and greatest technology doesn't bear out in the data from the InformationWeek National IT Salary Survey. But a follow-up survey we did shows a notable number of older workers think they--and their higher salaries--have been targeted in layoffs.
Breaking the over-50 data into managers and staffers, 54% of managers think they're valued and put in positions to share their experience, 41% say they're valued but underutilized, and 5% don't think they're valued. For staff, it's 40%, 47%, and 13%, respectively.
Take Rob, a 30-year IT veteran who has an MBA, is a CPA, and has certifications as a Java programmer and Java architect. Since being laid off four years ago at age 50, he's been working steadily as a contractor. Based on his billing rate, he figures he makes about $120,000 annually. The permanent jobs he's seen available pay about half of that.
In our survey, 11% of staffers and 12% of managers say they think they've been laid off because of their age. Of those respondents, about three-quarters say the company did so at least in part to replace them with younger or cheaper talent. A third of staff and 20% of managers say outsourcing or offshoring played a part.
Most landed new work, doing the same job at another company (50% of staffers and 69% of managers) or finding different jobs after being retrained (47% of staffers and 20% of managers).

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