Important information from cicnews.com:
What to do if your occupation is capped out
If you find that your primary occupation is capped out, you may have other options for immigration to Canada:
Overlapping occupation descriptions under the FSWP
Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) provides a description of main duties and sample occupation titles for each eligible FSWP occupation. In some cases, these duties and titles overlap across different National Occupation Classification (NOC) codes. Take, for example, Computer programmers and interactive media developers. An applicant who was eligible under this occupation might also be eligible as an Information systems analyst or consultant (NOC 2171), Database analyst or data administrator (NOC 2172), or Software engineer/designer (2173). The preceding three occupations have not yet capped out.
Previous work experience in another occupation
The FSWP requires an applicant to have at least one year of work experience in an eligible occupation in the past 10 years, but this does not necessarily have to be the applicant's current or most recent occupation. An applicant could have made a career change in the past 10 years. If the applicant finds that his or her current occupation is capped out, he or she might be eligible under another occupation. For example, a computer programmer who used to work as a civil engineer within the last 10 years may be eligible to apply as a civil engineer (NOC 2131).
The applicant's spouse might be eligible for immigration to Canada
Applying for Canadian immigration is a family affair. An application includes a principal applicant and his or her spouse or children. If the principal applicant's occupation is capped out and he or she is married, the spouse's work history should be examined for experience in one of the eligible occupations for the current FSWP.
And many more on http://www.cicnews.com/2014/10/federal-skilled-worker-occupation-caps-49-remain-open-act-quickly-104009.html