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paul78 wrote: » BTW - is there any particular reason why you want to restrict your career only to non-management roles. The reality is that if a part of you career goal is to maximize your compensation, some management experience helps. One other non-management IT-like role that is sometimes overlooked by folks in pure IT careers is sales engineering. In some companies, there is no cap on the upside.
pcgizzmo wrote: » I assume that a CCIE would be one of the highest paying tech jobs around that aren't management or executive level jobs. What are the others and what range would you think they would pay? I'm a network admin and my salary is in the mid 80's but I wear a lot of hats. I'm just curious if there are any tech jobs that would get over 6 figures. I'm pretty sure CCIE would in some or most areas of the US. Thanks
pcgizzmo wrote: » I'd work in Afghanistan if I could carry a M16.
pcgizzmo wrote: » my wife is an attorney
eserfeliz wrote: » Specifically: what are the systems and skills that you have become proficient in or discovered an affinity for? I'm in my early thirties and I'm just jumping up into the low 70s in the wage scale; my observation is that a lot of the non-contract, mid-range salary positions being thrown at me are due to specific technology keywords in my resume. LANDesk and SCCM are two very popular keywords, it appears, in the Fort Lauderdale area. Downplay your JOAT abilities for a moment and pound the pavement for a senior-level role working with a specific technology that you consider yourself to be an expert in. This means going to user groups, creating topics on forums (like techexams!), network and meet people. With your experience, I wouldn't worry about what you need to get six figures. If you're generally happy doing what you're doing, see if there's a job role that allows you to specialize in a particular technology and immerse yourself in it. If you become an expert in three years, the money will follow.
SteveLord wrote: » The best guys in my state ($140k) make a little more than the managers. A few are team leaders over a few others, but they are still technical and the go to SMEs.
pcgizzmo wrote: » A couple of reasons. I am 42 and don't have a degree so management might be difficult for me but I'm not sure it was just my thought that management might demand a degree. The other reason is it seems to me that management at least middle management in a medium to large company usually is the first to go if there are lay offs. At my age lay offs aren't something I can have a lot of tolerance for.
Everyone wrote: » I was happy to find that the company I just started with has a technical non-management path that goes very high in pay. Even being on the bottom rung for my title, I started in the deep 6 figure range. I can have "Senior" added in front of my title, and be in the same salary band as my Manager, but still be in a purely technical role. I can even go higher than that and have "Principal" added in front of my title, and be in the same salary band as a Director, while still being technical with no management responsibilities. It is possible, but you have to be VERY skilled to get there, and the smaller the company, the less likely you are to see it.
paul78 wrote: » If it's helpful to know, I'm a college dropout. But I suspect that in my position, that is an anomaly. Larger companies do have layoffs, but management and non-management are not immune. It really about the type of efficiencies that the organization is looking to gain and it's always the B players that make the list first. And if the organization is looking to labour arbitrage IT, usually it's the non-management that gets laid off first. All around I agree that layoffs are a scary thought in this economy. I personally worry about it all the time - it's probably not warranted but it helps me stay grounded and not take my job for granted and give me a healthy respect for own performance. I am not necessarily advocating management if that's not your interest. I personally do not like it and after 20 years I was fortunate to wrangle a role where I can have the a leadership position without the burden of personnel management. Hopefully, this dialogue was useful. There are definately many different types of non-management jobs out there pay 100k+. Do you enjoy network administration? You mentioned an interest in security - forensics and e-discovery - if that's where you want to go - the education/certs that would be helpful would include CISSP, GCFA. You mentioned working with a law firm - the CIPP is also common when working with lawyers (mostly if you have to deal with privacy law).
Asif Dasl wrote: » Would anybody have something similar to this for New York / California - or where is the best place to find out salaries in these areas? Thanks.http://hudson.ie/Portals/IE/documents/sitedocuments/ireland-salary-survey-2012.pdf
kenoo wrote: » I work in the financial sector of NYC, these places pay engineers right out of school 6 figures(plus bonus) to start
petedude wrote: » I can't blame people for wanting a high-paying job that isn't management. There was a time when management was the only route for good pay, and that has changed with the advent of IT specialties.
pcgizzmo wrote: I've covered the gambit of things in my time in IT. I used to have my MCSE but haven't kept up since 2000 Server. I used to be Citirix certified but didn't keep that up either. I am VERY good with MS Server operating systems as well as directory services. I have administered a Cisco ASA for the last 6 years and before that a PIX firewall. I worked as a system engineer for a consulting company 16 years ago before taking my current job as a network admin of 12 years for my current company. I would say I'm more of a jack of all trades and a master of none but close in MS Server OS's and I'm decent in routing/switching/firewall implementation. My main issue is that I got comfortable at my current job and didn't keep up with certs after the consulting job because I got tired of chasing the rabbit. I am now feeling at the age of 42 that I need to again get some certifications and probably move from my current job as there is no upward momentum. There is just my boss above me then the CIO. My boss manages 6 people plus me in my department and the CIO manages our 9 programmers plus to a lesser extent interacts with us for certain things. We have about 500 employees at my company.
pcgizzmo wrote: » I've covered the gambit of things in my time in IT. I used to have my MCSE but haven't kept up since 2000 Server. I used to be Citirix certified but didn't keep that up either. I am VERY good with MS Server operating systems as well as directory services. I have administered a Cisco ASA for the last 6 years and before that a PIX firewall. I worked as a system engineer for a consulting company 16 years ago before taking my current job as a network admin of 12 years for my current company. I would say I'm more of a jack of all trades and a master of none but close in MS Server OS's and I'm decent in routing/switching/firewall implementation. My main issue is that I got comfortable at my current job and didn't keep up with certs after the consulting job because I got tired of chasing the rabbit. I am now feeling at the age of 42 that I need to again get some certifications and probably move from my current job as there is no upward momentum. There is just my boss above me then the CIO. My boss manages 6 people plus me in my department and the CIO manages our 9 programmers plus to a lesser extent interacts with us for certain things. We have about 500 employees at my company.
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