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Dublin cloud computing company set to create 200 new jobs in the next three years
Recruitment for some positions is already underway.
Your contributions will help us continue to deliver the stories that are important to you
Recruitment for some positions is already underway.
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The company has announced a global restructuring process, and has entered into a 30-day consultation period with staff.
The company, which was in the top 20 of Fortune’s Best Companies to work for, says the jobs will be in the areas of sales, marketing, IT and customer support.
The new jobs are being provided by an IT company which already employs 3,000 people in Ireland.
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The €6 million funded centre hopes to make Ireland a world leader in this fast-growing sector.
LogMeln will set up a new base in Dublin in the coming months and plans to hire more than 50 new people next year.
The new jobs are due to come online over the next 12 months as a direct result of the company now offering its services in the cloud.
Fridges that recommend recipes, robot vacuums and moving the walls at the touch of a button…
Salesforce.com – listed by Forbes as one of the world’s best places to work – will begin recruitment immediately.
Irish firms are adopting cloud computing without even realising it according to a survey.
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Fine Gael Senator Catherine Noone said a cloud-based email system like Gmail would save money and increase flexibility.
Around a third of small and medium businesses say they expect to be more successful next year than they were this year.
VMware, a major cloud infrastructure company, is to establish its operations in Ballincollig where it already employs 550.
Fort Technologies is set to double the workforce at its HQ in Citywest, Dublin.
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IT expert says there is a lack of expertise in Ireland in cloud based technologies, and that posts are lying vacant.
The new jobs were announced today at government buildings.
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A report compiled by Goodbody and commissioned by Microsoft says Ireland’s cloud computing base could be the ‘next IFSC’.