Kenyan-German working group examines IT outsourcing and labour market trends

Kenya

On 28 January, this year’s first meeting of the Kenyan-German Working Group on Global Business Services (Business Process and IT Outsourcing) took place. The online session focused on the state of IT labour market in Germany and Kenya. The Friedrich-Naumann Foundation in Kenya (FNF) and the Trends and Insights for Africa Institute (TIFA) presented their market survey report on “Enabling Ethical Outsourcing between Kenya and Germany”. You can download it here.

The FNF and TIFA Institute shared their market survey report. © Friedrich Naumann Stiftung

Complementary demographic developments

According to Maggie Ireri, TIFA, the study provides closer insight into Kenya and Germany's largely complementary demographic developments. Due to an ageing population, Germany is expecting significant shortages in its ICT labour market. Meanwhile, Kenya has a young, tech-savvy, English-speaking workforce that is continuing to grow. To harness this potential, adequate information about the cost and skills needed in both ICT labour markets is crucial.

Kelvin Masika, TIFA, interpreted the data that the survey collected from job sites such as LinkedIn in Germany and Kenya. It focused on ICT jobs, salaries, and required skills. The researchers found that in both countries, most open jobs were in software development. In Germany, a more balanced distribution across development operations and IT support was noticeable due to a more diversified tech ecosystem.

Kenya's cost-effective and high-quality ICT workforce

The participants also shared that Kenya is a cost-attractive location compared to German salaries. Companies can save substantially on salaries for software developers, as these costs are roughly half of what they would be in Germany. This makes Kenya a mid-cost workforce option in international comparison. The study concludes that the Kenyan ICT workforce is competitive enough to meet German market demands.

Knowing who to ask for help

For German companies, a valuable avenue towards recruiting Kenyan talent can be a collaboration with Kenyan BPO service providers. Such local players can help in understanding local dynamics and market dynamics, including costing ranges. When recruiting Kenyan professionals directly, it can be advisable to work through local headhunters or to approach talent working at mid-sized tech companies, as they are most open to new opportunities.

During the Q&A part of the webinar, it was reiterated that 37 % of German IT job postings are remote, compared with 12 % of jobs in Kenya. This proves again that hiring international talent is a concrete avenue to fill roles that are currently in demand in Germany.

The webinar concluded with a short outlook on upcoming events and opportunities offered by the Kenyan-German Digital Dialogue. If you would like to be a part of the working group and get updates and news first-hand, simply email digital-dialogues@giz.de.

Go back

More interesting news

Kenya

Kenyan IT talent and European demand: building new partnerships for digital services

While European companies debate the effects of AI adoption on talent shortages, a delegation of Kenyan IT companies made a direct pitch: the skilled talent and services many European businesses are looking for already exist – in Nairobi. These talents cannot only fill junior roles but are increasingly skilled and adapt to the changing work environments of AI.

Read more …

The visual shows the title of the exchange format on tech-facilitated gender-based violence.

Kenya

Connected against harm: A Kenyan-German exchange on tech-facilitated gender-based violence

The Kenyan-German Digital Dialogue hosts a series of exchanges with KICTANet, a Kenyan think tank, and the Federal Association of Women's Counseling Centers and Women's Emergency Hotlines in Germany (bff). The exchanges are dedicated to mutual learning and collaboration on the mitigation of technology-facilitated gender-based violence (TFGBV) in Kenya and Germany.

Read more …

Kenya

Open-source cooperation: turning policy dialogue into concrete partnership opportunities in Nairobi

Together with the Digital Transformation Center Kenya, the Secretariat for the Kenyan-German Digital Dialogue organised a high-level delegation visit of seven German and European digital, cloud, open-source, and outsourcing companies to Kenya. The key outcome of the mission: the identification of concrete areas for collaboration in the open-source ecosystem and in IT talent sourcing.

Read more …

Newsletter

Newsletter

Stay informed! To subscribe to the Digital Dialogues newsletter, enter your e-mail address here. Please also refer to our privacy notice.

What is the sum of 1 and 1?

All news