Intelligent CIO Middle East Issue 31 | Page 60

FEATURE: TRAINING A TYPICAL CYBERSECURITY PROFESSIONAL NEEDS HANDS ON AND PRACTICAL EXPERIENCE. ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// instance, SAP has been pro-active in helping Saudi Arabia fill its 30,000 IT jobs gap by making high-demand digital skills accessible to Saudi youth and contributing to Saudi Vision 2030 talent development goals. “Ground breaking innovative technologies like artificial intelligence, machine learning, the Internet of Things, blockchain and cloud are coming together to transform the Saudi workplace of the future,” said Steve Tzikakis, President South Europe, Middle East and Africa at SAP. “Public, private and academic sectors are strategically value of SAR199 million in terms of skills and knowledge development in the kingdom. “The technology world is growing very fast, and SAP tools nowadays are becoming the main requirements for some well-known companies in Saudi Arabia,” said Yazeed Alkarzai, an analyst in governance and release planning for Global ERP at SABIC who graduated from the Young Professional Program in July 2017. “I would advise every Saudi to join the SAP Young Professional Program. With SAP skills, Anna Collard, Founder and CEO of Popcorn Training Letting staff organise internal ‘hackathons’ or ‘steal the flag’ competitions motivates practical on-the-job learning and can increase intrinsic motivation.” Collard also advises CIOs to look for ‘attitude’ more than specific qualifications when trying to bridge a skills gap, with senior professionals being difficult to find. “The key is to hire people with the right mindset rather than look for qualifications only,” she said. “Someone who has critical thinking abilities, an aptitude to learn fast and is a great self-motivator, coupled with some internal coaching, will in time develop the necessary skills.” Direct training with IT companies Some tech companies are getting directly involved with training potential talent. For 60 INTELLIGENTCIO joining forces to integrate digital skills from education, through graduation to the workplace with a view to enabling the kingdom achieve its immense potential and transform the economy, society as well as the environment. SAP is very proud to play a leading role in building and fostering these partnerships through the SAP Training and Development Institute.” Aligned with SAP’s four-year SAR285 million Saudi investment plan, the SAP Training and Development Institute has trained over 750 Saudi nationals, with a 98% career placement post training. SAP’s Young Professional Program is a two to three month-long training project for unemployed Saudi talent to become SAP Certified Associate Consultants. Since 2012, the institute has generated an in-country your chances of getting your dream job will be incalculably higher.” Additional programmes offered by the SAP Training and Development Institute include the Dual Study Program that integrates SAP technology training and certification into the university curriculum, the Startup Focus Program that supports ideas based on big data, predictive, or real-time analytics solutions, and Winnovate which enables breakthrough business innovation with Design Thinking and further innovation methodologies. Furthermore, SAP enables 35 educational institutions in Saudi Arabia through its University Alliances Program and works with companies, partners and universities to connect and innovate with purpose through SAP Next-Gen. n www.intelligentcio.com