Quench24 wrote: » it is so boring sitting at the desk with nothing to do
NetworkNewb wrote: » There is almost always stuff to do. Just because you got your work done you were assigned doesn't mean you should just stop and wait for more. I don't even mean start studying for certs at work either. Learn the systems that are in place better at your work, learn how to improve processes at your work, update/created documentation on things...
Quench24 wrote: » I'd much rather have tasks assigned to me that need to be done versus "looking" for tasks to do. I know it may sound kind of gorilla, but still. I'm like a robot. 1+2=3 not 1-3+6=?
si20 wrote: » This is a great thread - I actually completely understand your way of thinking!! Let me add my thoughts. I've been in the following situation: I was the sole IT guy on site. I was in charge of overseeing about 20-30 users and I was required maybe 2-3 times per day. Sometimes, if I wanted, I could literally spend 1 hour spinning around in my chair because no one checked on me and no one was in. I thought it was boring. I hated it to the point where I left. I went to university and haven't had a stable job since. My point is that you should re-evaluate your job description. If you're a network guy, then learn more about how your network is pieced together. Build your knowledge and skills. You need to own the time, don't let the time own you. I fell into that trap. Time owned me and I left. I should have spent that time remotely logging onto the server, checking how the active directory had been built, what users had what permissions and how they were inherited. Then I should have looked at the cisco devices and seen how they were patched in. In short: use your downtime wisely. If you truly can't hack it, then I still completely understand. Some people (myself included) like being given a task and running with it. Very, very sadly - most IT Managers don't deserve to be managers and they don't give tasks. I've only had one manager in my entire IT career give me regular tasks and he emigrated, so that ended sharpish. All I will say, is that helpdesk/service desk roles are the pits. You think IT roles are bad? You aint seen nothing yet! I interviewed recently for a service desk role and had to stop myself from yawning during the interview. The guys interviewing me had lost all emotion; they'd became robots. This is how the conversation went: "ITIL. Best practice. We follow it. Framework. Yes. Escalate". My god. It was downright depressing on every possible level. They had become so accustomed to their framework of choice, they could no longer see out of the box and their souls had been sucked out of them. Even if they offered me a 60k contract i'd have ran away and chosen to be a poor guy but with a smile on my face than have a good salary and be miserable and lifeless. It's your call, but personally, i'd try my absolute best to make the IT role work, because as the saying goes, you don't know what you've got until it has gone!