Young Mainframe Programmers are the Cat’s Meow
Posted by Ben Worthen
IBM today introduced a new line of mainframes, the massive computers that businesses have used to process data for decades.

Which raises the question: Where do businesses find people who remember how to program the things?
That’s a question IBM is grappling with, as well. Most computer-science students these days view mainframe programming as the tech equivalent of learning Latin. They’d rather learn Java, AJAX, Ruby on Rails and other hot new Web programming languages. So, since 2004, IBM has been trying to get colleges and universities to include mainframe classes in their curriculums. IBM estimates that 50,000 students have sat through a mainframe class since then.
Students like Elizabeth Bell, a 23-year old computer-programming student at Georgian College in Ontario, Canada, are starting to realize that while being a young mainframe programmer may not be sexy, it’s highly marketable. “There are so many legacy systems out there that it isn’t feasible to think that businesses will phase them out over the next 10 or 20 years,” she tells the Business Technology Blog. Rather than compete with 50 other Web designers for the handful of programming jobs that use the hot technologies of the moment – technologies that Bell says she knows – she taught herself COBOL, a mainframe computer language invented in 1959.
Bell says there are advantages to knowing an older technology. Sure, she probably won’t get a job at a startup. But she did land one at the Bank of Montreal that she didn’t even have to apply for: The bank sought her out because of her mainframe skills. And she’s not competing with any other people her age for managerial positions that are bound to come up. We asked her if it ever got annoying listening to her colleagues reminisce about Woodstock. She didn’t bite.
“I may be the youngest now,” she tells us. “But there are smart, practical kids who are in school because they want a career who realize that the mainframe is the way to go.”
Citi runs on mainframes…
Maybe they can capture a few younguns…
What goes around comes around. We’ve been hearing about the death of the mainframe for the past 25 years. It ain’t going away in 20 years, or even 30 years.
Maybe they can persuade a few over-50s to come out of retirement….
Okay, that hurt, “retired COBOL programmer”. I’m one of your “over-50s”, and though I started in COBOL moved over to Java years ago. Retired? Hardly.
Seems like icro Focus workstation COBOL with its JAVA Tool like IDE would help these new grads to move over to Mainframe Computing. Any thoughts on that?
Micro Focus Inc has an offload development tool for the mainframe called Mainframe Express. It has a full graphical IDE and a full CICS/JCL environment. It’s used to develop and or rehost mainframe applications to more contemporary platforms.
IBM has a add-on package to their eClipse based RAD tools that allow mainframe programming - COBOL, IMS, DB2 and CICS.
Don’t too many of you young folks do like Ms. Bell. I plan on supplementing my retirement dollars as a consultaant for mainframe systems. :)
I love what Ms. Bell did, They are more money in older things. they may look or sound old, but we the world still need them.
I love mainframe programming
Elizabeth Bell is my best friend and she is the smartest and hottest chick in the world. If you dont know her, you WISH you did!!!! j/k
Ruveee Rooooo
I need 4 cobol, cics programmer contractors in Phoenix for 4 months Health Care development. Please email David Gonzalez at
davidgindenver99@gmail.com.
We need immediate contractors.
I have started my carier by 19 years in Mainframes DB2 system programmig and I feel proud to be a DB2 sysprog. :-)
WSJ.com's business-technology blog focuses on the technology that businesses use -- the hardware, software, services and know-how that can make or break a business -- and on the people who deploy that technology. The lead writer is Ben Worthen, who joined The Wall Street Journal from CIO Magazine. The blog also includes contributions from other reporters and editors at the Journal, WSJ.com and Dow Jones Newswires. Have a comment? Write to