Analysis

London's tech workforce is starting to get restless

28th November 2017
Alice Matthews
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According to new research by the job site Indeed, the success of London’s technology sector could be stopped in its tracks by the restlessness of its tech workforce. The analysis of millions of job adverts - and job searches by candidates - revealed the sheer size of London’s tech sector puts it in a class of its own.

In the capital, 10.8% of all jobs advertised are in tech, which is virtually the same as the 10.9% as in the world’s best-known tech city, San Francisco.  

London-based employers account for just over a fifth (21.6%) of all UK job adverts listed on Indeed, yet the capital accounts for nearly a third (30.6%) of the nation’s tech job listings, far more than any other region.  

Yet London’s outsized tech sector could be tripped up by the itchy feet of its skilled workers.

Indeed’s researchers found London-based tech professionals are far more likely to look for work outside their home region than workers from elsewhere in the country.

Table: London’s technology sector accounts for nearly a third of all British tech jobs

In fact, London-based tech sector candidates are nearly twice as likely as the average Londoner to be searching for a job in Scotland, with North West England having a similar draw for tech professionals keen to escape the capital.

Table: How much more likely a London-based tech worker is to be looking for work outside the capital than the average Londoner  

London’s high cost of living is the most likely culprit for the willingness of its tech workers to consider jobs elsewhere. Official ONS data showed the average London property cost £484,000 in September, more than double the UK average of £226,000.  

Mariano Mamertino, EMEA economist at global job site, Indeed, commented: “London still boasts nearly a third of the nation’s available tech jobs, meaning the capital’s dominance of the UK tech sector is under no immediate threat.  

“Yet booming regional tech hubs like Cambridge - which this month saw the opening of a major new Amazon development centre - are catching up fast. Our research suggests their success, coupled with the regions’ lower living costs, could tempt ever more London-based tech workers to look beyond the M25 for their next role.

“While London’s tech hub crown is not yet up for grabs, such an exodus could make it harder for the capital’s tech employers to find the skilled people they need to grow further.”

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