Most of the roles I recruited for were in a niche market, within a regulated industry and the local market knowledge was always a must-have requirement. Fortunately, IT as a global industry has adopted internationally recognized and unified processes, certifications and best-practices. In other words, you can write a script, create an animation or develop an app for anyone, anywhere in the world.
Currently, due to political decisions, EU nationals can work and travel anywhere within the union, without too many restrictions, and international mobility is a real help when you have a shortage of local talents.
Originally, I am from Moldova – not the Maldives, neither Malta nor Mordovia. It’s a tiny place in Eastern Europe, with an exciting and appealing talent community. In private discussions with professionals and international recruiters, I find out that “home-made” talent acquisition strategies are less efficient while translated to the local market. I decided to create and share with you a market overview, from a generic, HR and IT professionals’ perspective.
Moldova has one of the best and fastest internet connections in the world, as well as the cheapest in terms of Dollar/Mbit.
The IT market is dominated by young, multi-lingual (English, Romanian, Russian, French, Italian or German) speaking professionals who graduated from well-known local state universities – like UTM (Universitatea Tehnica a Moldovei, Moldova Technical University), USM (Universitatea de Stat din Moldova, State University of Moldova), followed by ULIM, Pedagogical University or Tiraspol University from Chisinau. The central technical hub is the capital – Chisinau, and here the major and oldest IT players are based – like Amdaris, Arbos, Allied Testing, DAAC, Endava, Est Computer, Gilat, Noction, Point, Pentalog as well as smaller players. Software and web development, testing, animation are the most common areas. Some companies also provide consulting services.
The market is dominated by small and mid-size companies, often local or regional players who developed into well-known established firms. Large corporations, like Accenture, Oracle, IBM aren’t present.
Most of the employees are mobile (they either hold or will hold a Romanian or a Bulgarian passport, as dual citizenship is common due to the country’s history). They will consider mostly a well-established market like the UK, Germany or The Netherlands, as well as exotic destinations like Estonia, Ireland or Belarus (especially the ones with Russian citizenship). However, Romania will be the top option, because of the common language, history, customs, and national identity.
LinkedIn hasn’t a good penetration, and it’s not very popular. The traditional recruitment channels are:
You don’t need your Facebook sourcing skills here. As I will mention in the second part, local professionals are not feeling comfortable, while approached by strangers on Facebook. There are some groups dedicated to jobs in the IT companies (not just IT specialists, also HR, Sales, Marketing and similar roles). There are strict moderation and rules to be followed (there is a special place for those who ignore the rules). The largest are:
Use LinkedIn as a headhunting tool, rather than a job board. IT professionals, in general, have active profiles, but they don’t use it on a daily base.
Professional networks like GitHub and Stack Overflow are known as well.
The country is small with people well connected, and word of mouth is speeding fast. People will be ready to help if you ask.