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drkat wrote: » Hey Folks, just lookin to poll here and see if anyone here has made a career out of Desktop Support / Helpdesk type work - this does not involve server administration or networking but strictly desktops and managing "AD/Exchange/Applications" I'm only asking because I'm to a point in my career where I'm "out of options" I guess. I have no ambition to continue a career in Networking or Telephony and want to go back to "fixing the box" - I'm however really afraid of being used and abused by employers and getting paid **** One of my last roles before going into NOC type work - was a typical helpdesk but I had a lot of interaction with AD writing LDAP scripts and creating packages in altiris and scripting out enterprise-wide installations and patches. I'd like to go back to that. I was also thinking about certs and I could easily pass ICND1 but maybe Network+ would look better for these types of roles? I figuring like CCENT/MCP or something along those lines I honestly dont feel like the CCNA (i really have no interest beyond the basics) Whats everyone's opinions?
drkat wrote: » Thanks for the response. I'm at a cross road right now where I really hate "paying customers" and IT Management. I need a serious life reboot. To be QUITE honest... I was always good at computers growing up - technology in general really... I dropped out of high school @ 16 to become a "Junior Perl Programmer" for an ISP here in Rochester NY - how this was at the tail end of the dot-com so I'd say about 1999-2000. I did that for oh 2 months because they paid me $6/hr (shivers) and well - I eventually quit and moved on to doing odd jobs (fast food, carpet repair, walmart type stuff) - I went back to the ISP in 2002 and was in the same boat; I was suppose to be paid on per project basis but turned out to $7/hr again... I quit and eventually went to school for Automotive through a GM Apprenticeship Program at the local community college. I didn't finish but ended up working as a mechanic for 2 years on different makes/models - I did alright I flagged 35hrs a week or more @ $13/hr with bonus pay for anything over 32 hours. (You work flat-rate / piece work as a mechanic) I then found out "we're pregnant" @ 22 and well... I had to find a "good" job so I went back to computers and started off as a contract worker doing refresh projects and help desk / Desk side support on W-2 contract basis by leveraging my know how and right time opportunity. From there I did contracting from 2005 - 2008 never getting over $18/hr - I eventually took a job with a local Communications company working in their internal help desk making $14/hr - I was first not interested in the pay but it was full-time with bennies so I took it and I was in that department from 2008 to 2010 and did all i described in the original post - I loved it I was the SME on a bunch of stuff and was a great team to work with. I however was over-qualified and came across as a "know it all" - I eventually had a falling out with management and moved into their NOC. I worked in the NOC for 1.5 years and in April 2011 I did the stupid thing by quitting and moving to another Communications job who was offering a higher base salary. Needless to say this company didnt work out and I left and ended up where I am now doing voip and routing/switching. I've just done so much in my life so far that I'm wondering if I only got into IT because the wife was preggo -- I think sometimes that's it. I mean I liked computers but only in a certain capacity - I can fix em well and fast but I have no real ambition I guess... I've been behind the eight-ball for so long that I guess I'm at a point where I'm just looking for "peace" I feel I've run my course in the corporate world - I don't blend well with these people and I dont believe in screwing people or lying to customers. I'm not "college educated" I'm a blue-collar person who'd rather go to work in my jeans and car hart vs a polo and slacks. I'd rather work outside the office and leave the politics behind - f'd up thing is the only skills I have are either IT related or mechanics... I mean how the hell am I suppose to support a family on less then what I make now which is like $50K - I'd have to get two jobs but I'm thinking about it... just to be happy -- I'm just sick of the customers, the management, everything is an emergency and needs to be fixed now and fast - can never tell people it's not our issue; kissing a** to the customers.. I'm sorry but I'm a realist... Customers are people and sh** happens - networks go down, calls don't complete, servers mess up, switches break.. it's all a part of life - it's a PHONE! or COMPUTER! it's not life... maybe the businesses should have a DR plan or some sort of redundancy? yet that's my problem - the printer doesnt print fast enough - that's my problem... screw this; it's not my problem... I thought maybe by going back to desktop support it would "lighten the load" - but writing this post out I'm thinking it may only be a temporary solution and I'll eventually end up back here.... I've dealt with stress and anxiety during my whole IT Career which I never felt working before all of this... I honestly dont give a rats A** about certifications - which i think is a HUGE indicator. Problem is - I'm on these darn forums talking about this stuff since I have no buddy's in IT - they're all doing other stuff and seem a lot freaking happier than I am.. Anyway - if anyone wants to comment feel free... I'll be checking periodically but I think I'm gonna stick a fork in myself - cuz I'm done. - Mike
drkat wrote: » Hey Folks, just lookin to poll here and see if anyone here has made a career out of Desktop Support / Helpdesk type work - this does not involve server administration or networking but strictly desktops and managing "AD/Exchange/Applications"
drkat wrote: » I never thought about manufacturing - I may have to look into industries that need IT folks but not necessarily is corporate - I really do hate corporate dialog.
jfitzg wrote: » drkat: I am from Rochester as well and can give you some advice. If you are looking for a helpdesk and/or desktop support roll, check out the University of Rochester. They pay pretty well (especially for the work), their benefits are great (very cheap health insurance, 3 weeks paid vacation per year, and FREE college!), and its not hard work. I left there a while ago only because I am a type A (very driven) personality and they are a type C (very slow) organization. Heck, from what I am told they are still running Windows XP and IE 7 there! Get hired, get your GED, then get a FREE B.S. from one of the top colleges in the nation! Skip the certs if you go there, they dont know anything about them, just work with a resume service (Rochester Works should have something) and apply for many jobs there, they are slow to respond but they will.
drkat wrote: » I’ve worked for a hospital on contract once for their operations/helpdesk – it was a pretty sweet gig. My problem is this: Money. I find that the skills that pay the bills (thanks Everest guy) aren’t valued enough. I have way too much generalized crap on my resume and not enough focused. I mean hell let’s look at the list (in no particular order) 1. Desktop Support / Helpdesk – all aspects of hardware break fix/ Windows troubleshooting 2. Active Directory management – Accounts, Groups, OU Management etc 3. Microsoft Exchange management – 2003/2007 4. Citrix and Terminal Services administration 5. Microsoft Office 2000,2003,2007 / Lotus Notes 6. File and Print services 7. Novell - account management etc 8. Printer (hardware) break/fix 9. Altiris – packaging and scripting 10. Powershell to automate tasks for Exchange 07 and Active Directory – automating process and streamlining account creations / management – ldap scripting in perl 11. Perl scripting and basic linux administration – web,dns,ftp servers 12. CGI Web programming in perl – I wrote a hotmail clone once… sold it for profit 13. In-depth understanding of network protocols such as DNS, HTTP, SMTP, etc 14. Mobile devices – blackberry, windows mobile 15. Networking – IP Routing, MPLS, QoS 16. SS7 Telephony – Call Routing and Troubleshooting 17. VoIP – Broadsoft Switch, Session Border Controllers, SIP Trunking – troubleshooting and setup 18. T-Carrier circuits – provisioning, troubleshooting including PRI 19. Cisco, ADTRAN brands 20. Cat3/5 Cabling Now I don’t know about you but this is a big bag of mixed **** - Now I’ve been in the industry professionally first in 2001 as a Jr. Perl Programmer for an ISP and then came back in 2005 as a Desktop/Deployment tech. However!!! - The salary is just that… When I first started out it was $30K a year – then it went to $38, then to $35 then back to $30K… it eventually went up to $50K then back down to about $40K – you can’t make over $50K in this town doing IT… if it does happen it isn’t happening to me. Jfitz advised the UofR which starts you at about $17.00/hour – I guess that’s good pay for someone with a few years of exp – but I’ve got tons of experience and yet no focus and channelization. I need a mentor J
drkat wrote: » Nope no certs basically cuz I have no idea where to specialize lol
drkat wrote: » Where abouts? I have been in the game 7 years here.. maybe we know each other?
jfitzg wrote: » I doubt it, I dont hang out with other IT people. If UR isnt your gig you might want to try a managed IT services firm. THere are plenty of those, some pay great, some pay crap (stay away from Kriterium). They would appreciate your wide range of experience as they deal with all kinds of clients. Let me give you some advice I have learned from the 5 months it took me to find my last job. Experience trumps all! This is not negotiable, certifications barely come in 2nd but if you have a cert with no experience to back it up it pretty much doesnt count (I have a CCA in Xenapp 6, but I have no back end experience on Citrix, when people asked I explained I have a cert and they didnt care). 3rd, education means NOTHING. I have 2 graduate degrees ( IT and IT management from a respectable college) and maybe one person brought them up in the 15 or so interviews I went on. Make that resume up, make it a killer, and THAT is what will land you a job! You have a great skill set, make that look pretty on paper and you should be able to pull $50k from a managed IT services firm easy! In fact, PM me your resume if you want, I think I might know of an opening that you may like.
N2IT wrote: » Some companies require higher level degree, certifications, and everything inbetween, with that said I agree completely with you about the "Experience Factor".
drkat wrote: » jfitz I cant PM you. It says that you arent accepting them. I would like to say I do have SOME certifications just not the major ones. I do have a certification from ADTRAN, Polycom and brainbench stuff I just dont put them on my resume because they're all "free" certifications. (What can I say I dont want to spend money on something someone isnt going to value)
drkat wrote: » I’ve worked for a hospital on contract once for their operations/helpdesk – it was a pretty sweet gig. My problem is this: Money. I find that the skills that pay the bills (thanks Everest guy) aren’t valued enough. I have way too much generalized crap on my resume and not enough focused. I mean hell let’s look at the list (in no particular order) 1. Desktop Support / Helpdesk – all aspects of hardware break fix/ Windows troubleshooting 2. Active Directory management – Accounts, Groups, OU Management etc 3. Microsoft Exchange management – 2003/2007 4. Citrix and Terminal Services administration 5. Microsoft Office 2000,2003,2007 / Lotus Notes 6. File and Print services 7. Novell - account management etc ...SNIP Now I don’t know about you but this is a big bag of mixed **** - Now I’ve been in the industry professionally first in 2001 as a Jr. Perl Programmer for an ISP and then came back in 2005 as a Desktop/Deployment tech. However!!! - The salary is just that… When I first started out it was $30K a year – then it went to $38, then to $35 then back to $30K… it eventually went up to $50K then back down to about $40K – you can’t make over $50K in this town doing IT… if it does happen it isn’t happening to me. Jfitz advised the UofR which starts you at about $17.00/hour – I guess that’s good pay for someone with a few years of exp – but I’ve got tons of experience and yet no focus and channelization. I need a mentor J
eserfeliz wrote: » Hey dude, Sounds like you have a lot of experience doing a lot of different things. If I see this on a resume, I might think a few different things: 1. You're not sure of what you want to do. 2. You took a bunch of stuff and crammed it all on a resume. 3. You're a jack-of-all-trades, master of none. 4. You're going to leave in three months to go do something else. If you can, try to tailor your resume to the field that you're applying to. Like with like. Make a couple of resumes: help desk support, desktop support, network operations, development. I don't know what you should do about the dates. I guess just explain the gaps if you spent time in another field when you get to the interview. Make it absolutely clear to the hiring manager why YOU are the person for the job they're hiring for, not why you are the person for six different jobs. With your experience, I struggle to see why you aren't making 50k, other than, you know, bad economy. Things will pick up this year for hiring in the IT field, but you need to clean up your resume post-haste. I saw an e-mail from a recruiter to my boss today, the sharks are in the water. The security admin told me of multiple people he knows getting hired for full-time work, along with the companies they currently work for counter-offering in order to retain them. I wish you nothing but luck.
drkat wrote: » Yeah sorry about that... I tried to strip it of personal details - here is the word format
drkat wrote: I'm just sick of the customers, the management, everything is an emergency and needs to be fixed now and fast - can never tell people it's not our issue; kissing a** to the customers..
drkat wrote: 9. Altiris – packaging and scripting 10. Powershell to automate tasks for Exchange 07 and Active Directory – automating process and streamlining account creations / management – ldap scripting in perl 11. Perl scripting and basic linux administration – web,dns,ftp servers 12. CGI Web programming in perl – I wrote a hotmail clone once… sold it for profit
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