A respectable 24% of South African IT professionals included in this survey said they were "extremely satisfied" with their jobs. Compare this with the 22% of respondents who claimed to love their jobs in 2004, 25% in the 2003 survey, and the mere 6% in the 2002 survey.
Nearly half of the respondents (44%) indicated they were "fairly satisfied" with their jobs, matching last year`s findings.
The 23% of respondents who indicated they were just managing and the 9% who indicated they were not satisfied at all with their jobs mirrored the percentages in these categories last year.
[CHART]In addition to job satisfaction, the survey measures how happy IT professionals are with the money they are making. As in previous years, those who claimed to be "very satisfied" with their salaries took home the most money, that is 7% of respondents earning an average of R34 700 a month. More than half the respondents (51%) felt their salaries were competitive. Those who were not happy earned the least, that is an average of R16 400 a month.
[CHART]Worth noting is that the respective average salaries in the response categories "very satisfied" and "satisfied" rose slightly year on year, but dropped slightly in the "not satisfied at all" category from an average R16 676 a month in 2004 to R16 410 a month.
[CHART]In a direct departure from last year, most IT professionals rated the work-from-home option, extra leave, health benefits and training as those factors most important for their job satisfaction. Financial compensation, which ranked highest in the 2004 survey and fourth highest in 2003, featured more than halfway down the scale of 17 possible criteria in position 11.
Interestingly, respondents rated job atmosphere or company culture as least important of the satisfaction factors, with "challenge and responsibility" in second last place.
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