The job frustration continues, but with some progress......
Hi, I've been away a while, I gave everyone here a break from me. I was just reading a few topics here for the first time in months and decided to give an update on my current job frustrations. I just came off my first full, true, data center technician job. And it was good. First part of the job was to do an inventory of the entire data center, they wanted to start using the Nlyte DCIM program. So me and another retired network engineer (back out of retirement for the contract job) did it. 8000 lines in an Excel spreadsheet. Everything in every cabinet. Patch panels, cable management, power strips, specify A and B power, all the model numbers, serial numbers, position in the racks, amount of U spaces it took, etc. That was a good 7 weeks to complete. Then my contract got switched to hardware support for 6 months, and I was happy to do it. First thing, I got $25 an hour to sit around and DO NOTHING 90% of the time. Completely NOTHING. I could web surf on my laptop, but due to being in one big room, I couldn't play sound on youtube or take naps (ah, I miss that about desktop support). My trainer spent most of his day playing solitaire on his laptop for the 3 months I was there. I did get to do some HP rack server set up, then use iLO to set them up some more, I enjoyed learning that and doing it. Helped the engineer put some HP blades in as well and set them up. This went on for another month and a half. I got along well with all my co-workers, I was always happy to do whatever work needed done, things were good. Then... the next higher level manager above our data center manager retired, and a new, non-IT idiot with a management degree named Joe took his place. Joe and the data center engineer I worked with had a few good arguments on speakerphone that we all got to hear. Joe wanted him to do more inventory work, not just break/fix. The engineer often said "That's not my job". We all know how much managers love to hear that! So long story short, Joe decided to take work hours away from 2 work sites and give them to a third site. Bye bye, $25 an hour data center job. As usual, the lip service saying it'd last till the end of the year meant nothing. The managers in my office were screaming for Joe to hire more people for shift coverage, I was there, I was happy to work, but still, I am out on my ass. So, I applied for a NOC specialist position at a new nearby data center that is being staffed soon. Went through the application, went through the personality test (and somehow passed!!!), went through the phone interview, went through the in-person interview and... I've been waiting 5 days with no news. I really am overqualified for the job, based on the description, and $16 an hour will SSSUUUCCCKKK, but still, it is direct hire, no contract, no temp agency BS. I'll take the pay cut for the opportunity to get in and work my way up. Waiting for news now if I got it or not. Then I got a call for a short term, 4 week, $20 an hour, desktop support job. Meh, don't want it, but it's a paycheck. Will do it begrudgingly. Starts on Monday. And just today (Sept 6), I first got an email then a phone call for a good paying data center project. A big company is moving their DC to the new DC I just interviewed at over the next few months. Someone has to inventory the whole place, label all the cables and networking, put it in a spreadsheet, etc. They put me in at $30 an hour for it. I hope to get it and work my way into a job that lasts until spring, maybe even join the data center during the transition. So this evening, I am a bit tense. Want to hear some good job news immediately, this $30 an hour job is a rush order, hoping for good words on it tomorrow. You know how they say "always the bridesmaid, never the bride"? Well the story of my life is "always the IT contractor, never the hired employee". Oh well, only another 40-50 years until I die, then it'll be a non-issue.