Earthquake-damaged Christchurch is in need of 20,000 to 30,000 more workers.
"There is going to be bucket loads of work here in the next five to 10 years," said Simon Worthington, of the newly formed Canterbury Employment and Skills Board (CESB).
Many potential employees are seeing it as the opportunity of a lifetime to be involved in reconstruction, boost their salaries and further their careers.
Some of the predictions that were made about employment in Christchurch haven't come true. Worthington, who is the Canterbury Development Corporation's workforce-strategy manager, says unemployment has risen by about 1000 people - not 20,000 as some foretold. Even so, filling the skills gap will involve more than just recruiting people, says Manpower's New Zealand general manager, Michelle Visser. There will need to be money invested in up-skilling and retraining existingstaff.
It will also require a different approach to recruitment. Visser says that while living in Christchurch might not appeal to families as it might have in the past, younger or single people can be attracted by the outdoor lifestyle the city has to offer.