Local technology firms enjoy apparent resurgence
Andrew Edwards
Recent hiring trends suggest that technology firms in the area are
making a comeback, according to local job-placement companies.
Employment agencies have met increasing success finding jobs at
technology firms, and not just for computer experts. High-tech
companies have been looking to lower-level office staffers whose jobs
were cut around the time the technology sector started to slump,
around 2001.
“We’re seeing a surge right now,” said Kun Kuck, marketing
director for Abigail Abbott Staffing Services, a Santa Ana-based firm
that has an office in Newport Beach.
Positions in demand include receptionists and junior
administrative assistants, Kuck said. When the 2001 recession hit, people in these positions were often the first to lose their jobs,
being replaced by automated greetings.
Not surprisingly, office staffers are not the only ones benefiting
from the apparent resurgence of technology companies. An increased
demand for software designers, Web developers and network-security
experts has developed in the past six months, said Ryan Andaluz of
MacArthur Associates, a Newport Beach placement firm that specializes
in information technology jobs.
“I’ve been in this office for almost three [years], and things are
definitely much better than they were two years ago,” Andaluz said.
Statistics from the state’s Economic Development Department show
that employment went down in some, though not all, technology-based
industries in Orange County after 2001. The same set of figures
indicate hiring has rebounded.
For example, 19,800 people were employed by the Orange County
semiconductor and electronic components manufacturing industry in
2001. In 2003, that number was down to 13,300 and back up to 13,400
in December 2004.
Computer and electronic product manufacturers in Orange County put
49,500 people to work in 2001 and cut jobs down to 41,300 by 2003. At
the end of last year, 41,700 people were at work in that industry.
During the same time period, statistics show electronic-instrument
manufacturers managed to maintain job growth, while makers of
communications equipment were not able to expand their payrolls.
The market has also picked up for advertising professionals, said
Brian Gold, who owns Creative Link Staffing in Newport Beach. Gold’s
company places jobs for marketing and advertising professionals, and
about 65% of the company’s placements are at firms in Costa Mesa,
Newport Beach and Irvine.
Local companies seeking to beef up their marketing departments are
often in the technology, building and retail fields, Gold said, and
he has seen firms hire employees who initially signed on for
short-term work.
“Many times, the people who come in for a two-week temporary
assignment end up getting the jobs of their dreams,” Gold said.
Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce President Ed Fawcett said a healthy
market for office and marketing staffers indicates tech firms are
rebuilding.
Of course, not all companies with large or expanding staffs are in
the technology sector. Another important source of jobs is
healthcare.
“Healthcare jobs continue to outpace needs in virtually all
industries,” said John Hermann, president and chief executive of
Labor Relations Services, Inc., a Newport Beach company that
contracts human-resources services to other companies.
In Costa Mesa, the Fairview Developmental Center has about 1,600
employees, said Sandy Gonzales, assistant to the center’s executive
director. Though the center, which provides care to patients with
developmental disabilities, is not expanding its payroll, it has
openings for licensed psychiatric technicians, registered nurses and
respiratory-care practitioners. Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach is the
city’s largest employer, according to the Newport Beach Chamber of
Commerce. The hospital employs about 3,800 people and has been adding
to its payroll for the past five years, spokeswoman Jackie Bamberry
said. The hospital plans to hire about 200 more people this year to
staff the Sue and Bill Gross Women’s Pavilion, which is expected to
be completed by October.
* ANDREW EDWARDS covers business and the environment. He can be
reached at (714) 966-4624 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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