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Skills Employers Want: Microsoft Office, data analytics, virtual assistant top most-wanted skills
Tech Republic ^ | 10/20/2019 | N.F. Mendoza

Posted on 10/30/2019 1:28:16 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

Freelancer's Top 50 report looks at what employers want now -- and tech skills are at the top of the list.

It's always good to be wanted. And, if you posses the key skills of data analytics, Microsoft Office , copy typing, or a virtual assistant, you are wanted very much. From just the previous quarter of 2019, employer demand has grown to 58% for data analysts, according to Freelancer's Q3 2019 Fast 50 Report, which chronicles the world's fastest growing and declining jobs on the global market place, and culls from posts from its more than 38 million users, 4.6 million of which are in the US.

Tech-related jobs are on the upswing, just as the US Labor Department reports a slow of 1.3% in the hiring of traditional jobs.

Employers need skilled workers who can analyze and interpret data and identify emerging trends, as demonstrated by the bump from 1,114 to 1,770 data analytic jobs on Freelancer.com.

Employers are clearly growing more confident in virtual assistants, a position which rose from the tenth to the second fastest-growing skill in demand. The leap from 7,925 to 12,329 job openings represents a 56% increase in the popular job, which includes tasks from data entry to social-media posting. Demand for artificial intelligence (AI) skills increased globally, despite a quarterly decline for Matlab and Mathematica, mechanical engineering, and algorithm.

"The demand from data analytics indicates more savvy businesses are seeking these highly specialized freelancers to help determine business decisions that increase revenue, improve operations, respond to emerging market trends and gain a competitive edge, while virtual assistants are streamlining processes and creating efficiencies and cost savings" Matt Barrie, Freelancer CEO and founder said in a press release.

The number one top freelancing jobs for Q3 2019 are for those skilled in data analytics, as businesses grapple with making sense of increasing volumes of data. The data analytic market is forecast to grow to $275 billion by 2023. Currently available jobs on Freelancer range from "developing trading strategies" to "understanding business trends." Demand for data-processing skills (38.6%) remains strong, despite dropping to fourteenth place (It was fifth in Q2 2019.).

While big tech moves to create smarter AI-powered virtual assistants like Google Duplex, Amazon Alexa , Microsoft Cortana,  and Apple Siri for business and home admin, a human virtual assistant still (56%) holds much appeal, as it was second in most-wanted skills, rising from its previous position in Q2 2019 of tenth. The position calls for those who offer diversified skills; some "want ads" include customer service; others, social-media marketing and blog posting. Virtual assistant jobs hold appeal to those who like to work remotely, and can use the time to manage, not only the VA job, but whatever other projects they may have (or look for more permanent work).

Microsoft Office has experienced a renaissance under CEO Satya Nadella, and it was the third most in-demand skill this quarter. Previously, demand for the skill had been in decline until it began to grow, starting in 2018. For Q3 2019, it rose a further 54%. Microsoft Excel skills are in the Fast 50, too, moving from twentieth to sixteenth place from Q2 2019 to Q3 2019.

Copy typing, the process of inputting and transforming raw data into a format more appropriate for processing or data cleaning, was in fourth place in the top 10 most in-demand skills and grew 53% (6,988 to 10,629 jobs).

If you don't mind data entry/typing, the fifth position jobs are in transcription. Other emerging jobs to watch, said the report, are book writing and ghost writing, which cracked the top 25. The other emerging job is translation, "a variety of language skills were in hot demand in Q3 2019," the report indicated. Russian translation is number seven of the most in-demand skills, with a 51% rise, English translation saw a 29% rise, followed by Spanish (27%) and French (25%).

Here are the top in-demand skills for Q3 2019:

1. Data analytics

2. Virtual Assistant

3. Microsoft Office

4. Copy Typing

5. Transcription

6. Word

7. Russian

8. Bookkeeping

9. Email handling

10. Customer support

11. Freelance

12. Data Entry

13. Customer Service

14. Data processing

15. Web Search

16. Excel

17. PDF

18. React.js

19. Book writing

20. English

21. Spanish

22. Internet research

23. Digital Marketing

24. French

25. BPO

26. C++ Programming

27. Civil Engineering

28. Ardunio

29. Adobe Flash

30. Machine learning

31. Research Writing

32. Database programming

33. Swift

34. Programming

35. Statistics

36. PCB layout

37. Mathematics

38. Electronics

39. Objective C

40. Shopping Carts

41. Microsoft Access

42. Computer security

43. Network administration

44. Report writing

45. Engineering

46. Electrical engineering

47. Statistical analysis

48. Algorithm

49. Mechanical engineering

50. Matlab and Mathematica


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet; Society
KEYWORDS: analytics; employers; jobs; skills
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To: TheNext

So damn true.


21 posted on 10/30/2019 1:54:41 PM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: FewsOrange
7. Russian ...

****

Gotta keep those elections going!

22 posted on 10/30/2019 1:55:29 PM PDT by ealgeone
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To: SeekAndFind

There is no way Swift and C++ are more in demand that C# for .NET, no way, no how


23 posted on 10/30/2019 1:56:02 PM PDT by GulfMan
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To: FewsOrange

The need for Spanish is to be able to read and understand scientific papers.


24 posted on 10/30/2019 1:57:30 PM PDT by Balding_Eagle ( The Great Wall of Trump ---- 100% sealing of the border. Coming soon.)
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To: Roman_War_Criminal

Don’t need any of these skills to sit in the board of a foreign energy company. Just ask Hunter Biden.


25 posted on 10/30/2019 1:57:55 PM PDT by a fool in paradise (Recall that unqualified Hillary Clinton sat on the board of Wal-Mart when Bill Clinton was governor)
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To: Spirochete
Access gets a bad rap.

Mostly useless unless couple with VBA competence and solid SQL skills.

26 posted on 10/30/2019 2:00:08 PM PDT by Sirius Lee (They are openly stating that they intend to murder us. Prep if you want to live.>>>)
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To: mylife

The List makes no sense at all.

Engineering at 45 and 46.


27 posted on 10/30/2019 2:01:35 PM PDT by eyedigress ((Old storm chaser from the west))
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To: eyedigress

Yup


28 posted on 10/30/2019 2:04:00 PM PDT by mylife (The Roar Of The Masses Could Be Farts)
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To: Sirius Lee
Mostly useless unless couple with VBA competence and solid SQL skills.

Yep. For any real work SQL Server and extensive VBA is required.

A small multi-user database with no more than, say, 10 concurrent users could be built using *only* Access. More than that is pushing it which is why it's so easy to quickly outgrow and one of the reasons for its bad reputation. Another is poor product positioning and the consequent bad app design by power users with no DB skills.

29 posted on 10/30/2019 2:12:14 PM PDT by Spirochete (GOP: Gutless Old Party)
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To: CJ Wolf

“Cobol is at number 51.”

Wow! My first job was at a bank as a COBOL programmer back in 1983 or so.


30 posted on 10/30/2019 2:16:13 PM PDT by LeoTDB69
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To: SeekAndFind

28. Ardunio Already dead.
You need to go to #26 before you find a real career.


31 posted on 10/30/2019 2:16:54 PM PDT by Zathras
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To: SeekAndFind

PDF is a skill?


32 posted on 10/30/2019 2:42:41 PM PDT by vikingd00d (chown -R us ~you/base)
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To: SeekAndFind

This is a stupid list.


33 posted on 10/30/2019 2:50:38 PM PDT by impimp
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To: SeekAndFind

bkmk


34 posted on 10/30/2019 3:34:04 PM PDT by Sergio (An object at rest cannot be stopped! - The Evil Midnight Bomber What Bombs at Midnight)
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To: eyedigress

Rail transportation and freight will suffer.


35 posted on 10/30/2019 3:34:10 PM PDT by Scrambler Bob (This is not /s. It is just as viable as any MSM 'information', maybe more so!)
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To: Scrambler Bob

Isolated villages won’t be needing those things according to retarded minds like the Bern and AOC.


36 posted on 10/30/2019 5:13:18 PM PDT by wally_bert (Your methods were a little incomplete, you too for that matter.)
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To: SeekAndFind

It is amazing how hard it is to find someone with relatively simple skills when you need to fill a job.

Back in 2013-14, when unemployment was high, a buddy searched in vain for someone with basic Unix shell scripting and SQL. Everything else he needed, the company was willing to teach him. The job was in Columbus, but we were willing to go $80-90K. No qualified takers.

I hate to think what it’s like now. Anyone who’s any good at all must be able to name his price.


37 posted on 10/30/2019 6:00:49 PM PDT by proxy_user
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To: SeekAndFind
My advice to people starting out in the business world is to go on YouTube and learn at least one Office tip a day.

Such as creating a Word template or an Excel formula or how to embed a video clip into a Powerpoint. There are thousands of things that can be done within just the Microsoft Office suite and those skills can be easily transferred to other products such as Google Docs.

This isn't just "secretary" stuff anymore. Business executives are expected to know this stuff too.

38 posted on 10/30/2019 6:05:14 PM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: Spirochete
Eons ago I would make fat-clients that used an Access database for local storage, and made a synchronization process to send the data to a web service tied to an Oracle or MS SQL DB (assuming the client had a good internet connection, which in some cases was a big assumption back in the day). All of the program code and UI would be made outside of Access, connecting to the Access DB through either OLE or ODBC.

There was nothing special about Access except that it was "free" in that all the users had MS Office. I say nothing special, the Jet database engine in Access and FoxPro was probably pretty good for a local client database engine (never expected to compete with a server DB engine). But as far as building the UI in Access I always found that severely lacking, especially compared to MS Visual Studio (both .net and pre .net). And the VBA code base was definitely lacking relative to VB, C# or even FoxPro.

39 posted on 10/31/2019 7:55:16 AM PDT by Tell It Right (1st Thessalonians 5:21 -- Put everything to the test, hold fast to that which is true.)
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To: SeekAndFind

My millenial son is making a good living as a consultant and trainer with this new analytics company which is hiring:

https://powerpivotpro.com/

They deliver training and consulting in:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_BI


40 posted on 10/31/2019 12:27:24 PM PDT by Seizethecarp
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