Mongo is the SF architect’s default database choice, and not surprisingly its trending heavily on Indeed.com. Other NoSQL technologies are seeing similar growth- interestingly Jan 2010 seems to have been the trigger when NoSQL become a significant job trend. The graph below isn’t a scientific or comprehensive list of NoSQL technologies- I just thought it made the point about the date inflexion point. Anyone know what happened that month to kick things off? I should also dig in on location – to see where these Mongo jobs are.
MongoDB, Redis, Cassandra, CouchDB Job Trends | Mongodb jobs – Redis jobs – Cassandra jobs – Couchdb jobs |
disclosure: 10gen [Mongo] and VMware [Redis] and the Apache Software Foundation (Cassandra) are clients.
Dr. Richard Chopp says:
May 18, 2012 at 7:10 pm
“Mongo is the stupid SF architect’s default database choice”
Fixed it for you.
James Governor says:
May 18, 2012 at 7:50 pm
Less experienced might by fairer, Dr Chopp. there does appear to be a generational thing going on.
10Gen Raises $42 Million to Bolster MongoDB and Battle for the Database Market | ServicesANGLE says:
May 29, 2012 at 12:22 pm
[…] 10Gen develops MongoDB, the open-source NOSQL database. It provides a subscription service, support and training for the fast growing database technology. […]
MongoDB Developer 10gen Raises $42 Million Round Led By New Enterprise Associates | TechCrunch says:
May 29, 2012 at 12:47 pm
[…] hard to get exact statistics for the number of MongoDB deployments, but according to analyst firm RedMonk, MongoDB is leading the pack with regards to companies looking for NoSQL database developers and […]
jorjun says:
June 4, 2012 at 9:35 pm
Adopt Mongodb and then watch your line-count reduce. Always a good sign…
MongoDB Developer 10gen Raises $42 Million Round Led By New Enterprise Associates | Tech Chatter says:
June 12, 2012 at 3:52 am
[…] hard to get exact statistics for the number of MongoDB deployments, but according to analyst firm RedMonk, MongoDB is leading the pack with regards to companies looking for NoSQL database developers and […]
The Side of My Desk » Why Should You Learn MongoDB in 2013? says:
December 30, 2012 at 7:34 pm
[…] May 2012, James Governor posted Indeed Job Trends for various NoSQL products, all heading uphill since 2010. The chart below shows job postings that […]