The networking company, however, lamented that tertiary institutions in the country were not producing enough Information and Communications Technology graduates to meet this demand.
It stated this after a meeting of Cisco Networking Academy instructors at the University of Lagos.
The General Manager, Cisco, English – West Africa, Mr. Dare Ogunlade, told our correspondent that governments also urgently needed to deploy policy and training programmes if the gap in networking professionals must be bridged.
He said that should governments fail to do this, “the global shortage of skilled Internet providers (networking professionals) would be at least 1.2 million people in 2015.”
The INSEAD Business School’s ‘Global Talent Competitiveness Index 2014’, co-authored by Cisco, supported the statistics.
This highlights that connectivity is accelerating at a fast pace in the country, thus creating a growing need for skilled ICT professionals.
Cisco said that the lack of young ICT professionals was not limited to Nigeria. “Increased connectivity, the Internet of Everything, rising digitisation of all business activities, globalisation of trade and travel, and economic growth globally has created the same problem in a number of countries globally,” Ogunlade said.
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