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MauriceMoss wrote: » Forgive my naiveness. Do most companies outsource to an "I.T. solutions provider"? I mean, how many of you work directly for the company you are serving? I am trying to leave my current position for another one (bad environment). I was hoping to be directly employed by the company I am providing service to. I want to be on equal footing as the end user. I want leverage for difficult users and not just told to kiss their a** because they are the customer. For those that are providing I.T. service to another company, what is your relationship with the company? Is it combative? If you don't do X,Y,Z, you will lose the contract etc etc. My problem is that I love computers/tech/etc but I don't like being treated like sh*t. This is the first time I have actually been in I.T. The environment seems very unstable (one person here today, gone tomorrow).
shodown wrote: » Wow who do you work at. I work for a MSP in the Northern VA area and I want to stay away from who ever it is you work for. I work for a MSP and its great. ITs a lot of hardwork, but the pay is very good, the work is interesting and challenging. I will agree with you that customers are a pain in the ass, but its a good job.
WafflesAndRootbeer wrote: » I was let go from CompuCom because I went out on a service call where I had to coordinate with a Siemens tech to repair a Xerox printer and the Siemens tech who showed up was working the Compucom contract before I was hired. She left because the team leader, who is a textbook disaster of a manager, had sexually harassed her/tried to force her to have sex with him and then I was given the boot the day after the service call with no explanation from the team leader other than "This is going to be your last week on the contract. We'll pay you til the end of the week but you don't need to bother showing up for work." Then they called me back two months later and wanted to know if I would take the same job but down in Richmond.
nethacker wrote: » the lady should have reported his a** so he can be convicted.
WafflesAndRootbeer wrote: » She reported him to the company. She had to leave and went to work for Siemens doing printer repair while he just stayed where he is to this day, managing their regional contracts in this area. Like I said, an MSP is a management only company. He was management and they won't get rid of him unless they are forced to. If you were to look up his name, you'd find it attached to many complaints against the company by both employees and customers who have dealt with his egomania. The thing about CompuCom is that their low-bid/cost-cutting tactics have won them many service contracts, so businesses have no choice but to use them when they are the official choice of the hardware vendors that local businesses and companies are using.
MauriceMoss wrote: » Forgive my naiveness. Do most companies outsource to an "I.T. solutions provider"? I mean, how many of you work directly for the company you are serving? I am trying to leave my current position for another one (bad environment). I was hoping to be directly employed by the company I am providing service to. I want to be on equal footing as the end user. I want leverage for difficult users and not just told to kiss their a** because they are the customer.
shodown wrote: » CompuCom say no more. I've had to work with them on some projects before. They underbid us on a few contracts for a previous employeer. They didn't even have the people with the skills and offered to re hire us at a lower rate. Our PM laughed and pulled us out and got us on new contracts.
WafflesAndRootbeer wrote: » You are there to lick the head, work the pipe, and swallow the gravy with a smile. That is how things work in today's world
veritas_libertas wrote: » Yup, and from what I've been told they treat their employees badly.
Netwurk wrote: » Um, no. None of us real IT folks are ready to give up or act out your bizarre scenario. But I guess guys like you sucked back during the original depression era. Worst post I've ever seen, not to mention disgusting. Where's a mod when you need one?
jmasterj206 wrote: » In my area I would say the direct hire is about 80% and contract is 20%. No matter where you go (contract or hire) IT is a thankless job. IT in a lot of businesses isn't a money making department, but a money costing department and a necessary evil. Most CEO's and CFO's just look at the money spent in IT on equipment and staffing and not at productivity gained. In the workplace now you will run into the inexperienced users that didn't grow up with computers and get frustrated with computers. Thus, they take it out on the IT staff. On the other side of the spectrum you have the younger generation that knows enough to be dangerous. They get mad at you because they can't install itunes on their work machines or can't access facebook and you will hear about it. Most people are pretty good, but wherever you are they are the troubled ones. You have to deal with it and have thick skin.
BradleyHU wrote: » he got that line from Tropic Thunder...courtesy of Jack Black...
Everyone wrote: » If your customer service skills suck, then you're in the wrong line of business. I've been in-house IT my entire career. Going on 13 years now, and being at the Senior/Lead technical level. I often have to talk directly to C level execs. There's no leverage. I can't go tell my manager that some C level is being difficult. I have to be able to handle it. Guess what, my manager trusts me to do the right thing. If he couldn't, I wouldn't be in the position I'm in. The key is, treat everybody the same, and treat them the way you would want to be treated. EVERYBODY I talk to is MY customer. At my level, I know right away that if any end user actually makes it all the way to me and still has a problem, then it is a big one, and they are not going to be happy. There are 3 tiers of support below me, so it has to be a major issue affecting a big chunk of the company for me to even get involved. So while I don't have to deal with anywhere near as many end users anywhere near as often as I did 12 years ago when I was working on a Help Desk, the ones I do have to deal with now are much harder.
Turgon wrote: » Some good advice there. Being able to handle situations and importantly people is very important today if you want to get on in IT. And that means all kinds of people at all kinds of levels. It's time to turn the people radar on, and if you are going to have to convince intelligent people in a senior role who have a lot to worry about..well you better be good at people.
LinuxRacr wrote: » Got a recruitment e-mail from someone at CompuCom, and it got me to thinking, "Where have I heard that name before..." Yeah, thanks for the heads-up in this thread...
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