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tdean wrote: » I've noticed a lot of you talk about promotions, more responsibility, learning new things, moving to different departments etc. Where are these jobs? I mean, how would i find a place that was structured in such a way that i'd be able to do my job, study, build new skills and move up the chain, so to speak? I understand some of you might say "In the city" or "at a financial company", but how would that work? i go in, and what.... ask to only do one job? i dont get it. Every place ive been i've had to do everything from help desk, to phones, to email, vpn's, website etc etc... this probably sounds ridiculous to some of you, but i just dont know how the corporate world works i guess.
mark_s0 wrote: » And people moving on is how these promotions come about. In my experience, the companies I have worked for promote from within so when someone leaves say in infrastructure, they promote the person under him who has SOME infrastructure responsibilities whilst shadowing other experienced infrastructure staff. I'm not saying that's how all companies work, it's just from my personal experience. I can't say i've seen many jobs put possible promotion opportunities into a job description so finding a company that will promote before getting an interview won't be easy. It's usually something I ask and find out about at interviews. I get bored with doing the same thing over and over so unless there's room to move in a company, I'll quickly move on elsewhere. I, like a lot of people in IT, are never satisfied with what they know or what they're doing and always looking to do more.
Mojo_666 wrote: » In my experience if you want to move up quickly you need to move on.
erpadmin wrote: » +1! In my experience, that was the same. I have never stayed at a company for longer than 5 years. (This last place is an exception though, as I'm trying to finish up my bachelor's so that I can move on to at least a supervisory position). There is just too much political crap people have to go through to advance. It's either you ____ some ___(_) [front or back action... ] or you move on. I choose the latter when feasible and if it's not then, like a grandmaster chess player, I wait patiently for an opening and then strike. But under no circumstances do I participate in the former.
Paul Boz wrote: » They specifically ruled out individuals who job hopped because they don’t see them as worth investing in.
Paul Boz wrote: » To understand promotions and advancements in one’s career you have to look at the big picture. There are really three primary ways to advance one’s career in IT. The method I see most frequently is “job hopping” and taking gradually larger and better paying jobs. This can be done quickly to really increase one’s income, but may raise serious red flags with potential employers. One of the primary reasons why my current employer chose to bring me on is my stable work history. They specifically ruled out individuals who job hopped because they don’t see them as worth investing in. I think the best chance for success here is to job hop to get through the lower level ranks then stick it out in a larger company.
Paul Boz wrote: » Another method, and the one which I recommend the most, is getting certifications and education. I don’t put as much emphasis on education in IT specifically, but it’s still valuable. Certifications raise your bottom line value, period. Certs got me my last job and got me paid at my current one. IT is a flooded field so you have to differentiate yourself from other candidates. Getting certs is an incredible way to do that. If an employer is looking at two candidates and both have similar experience and skill levels, the one with the certification is going to get the nod in a tie breaker. Most certifications are very inexpensive compared to formal education so there is really no reason not to pursue them.
I then listed each job on the resume and why I had to move on and they were all valid reasons (she must've thought so too, because I was hired two weeks later and I'm going on 5 years now next March!
Paul Boz wrote: » If you’re forced to change jobs due to legit issues (like at my last job, for example) that doesn’t really constitute job hopping. If you’ve had a slew of bad employers that’s one thing. Job hoppers often do not have a valid reason to leave, hence the bad image.
erpadmin wrote: » If I had a resume from a guy who had 5-10 jobs in 2-3 years, it's going in the shredder. Now if I see a resume from a guy with 4 jobs in say 11-13 years with the average length of time of 3-5 years, then it's going to at least warrant a look.
knwminus wrote: » No offense but that is a very old school mentality. I have been working since I was 15 years old. I have had about 12 jobs in the last 8 years. Why? Well I have moved a few times (school and back home), work two jobs at once (3 times), changed jobs all together, worked some contract jobs, got laid off, and now I at the end of this month I will be back to working 1 job again. I think that to say, "Oh he has had too many jobs" is a haughty mentality. The job market today is much different that it was 25 years ago. My Dad starting working about that long ago and he has been with the government for more than 20 years. I know that I will probably never be at a job for that long, maybe not even a 4th of that. IMO it shouldn't matter how many jobs you have worked because no one gives you a job for life and you do not give your services for life.* I see employee development going out the window at a lot of companies as a cost saving measure anyway. Just my 0.02 *Insert random Dynamik's Mom joke here
erpadmin wrote: » When I say I would shred a guy's resume with multiple jobs in a short amount of time, I meant if the guy had permanent positions, NO CONTRACT AND/OR PART TIME WORK. The length of contract jobs should definitely be stated in the resume and it should also be state that it was a contract job so that you get that consideration. I'm talking about the guy who has bounced from PERMANENT full-time position to PERMANENT full-time position in a short amount of time (non-contra. That is definitely a red flag because it tells an employer he's somewhat of a derelict and/or has some responsibility issues (or rather, irresponsibility issues). Nothing old school/new school about that.
erpadmin wrote: » I'm talking about the guy who has bounced from a PERMANENT full-time position to PERMANENT full-time position in a short amount of time (non-contract.) That is definitely a red flag because it tells an employer he's somewhat of a derelict and/or has some responsibility issues (or rather, irresponsibility issues.) Nothing old school/new school about that.
knwminus wrote: » Ok. That is very different and I agree. But while we are somewhat on the topic, how long is the "right" amount of time to be at a job? If you know you are at a place where you can't move up, why shouldn't you leave after 1-2 years rather than stay for 3-5 years just so your resume is more "stable"?
knwminus wrote: » If you know you are at a place where you can't move up, why shouldn't you leave after 1-2 years rather than stay for 3-5 years just so your resume is more "stable"?
Paul Boz wrote: » I don't count part time jobs like working at Best Buy or at the grocery store because they don't provide any professional insight. Do you know how silly it would be if I had Best Buy Sales Associate on my resume at this point? I agree with your assessment of what a job hopper is.
Paul Boz wrote: » That just depends on the job, honestly. If I made $50k/year and someone offered me $100k/year I don't care if my job is punching babies and watching TV all day, I'm leaving.
erpadmin wrote: » It's the same as adding your high school in "education." LMAO. (I don't have a degree, and I don't add my high school to education on my resume, but I put certs instead).
knwminus wrote: » I'd have to know the baby punching to tv watching ratio before I could make a decision
knwminus wrote: » This is interesting. I am only 4 years out of HS and that's about how much IT experience I have. I put my HS diploma under education although I am working towards a degree. When I get my A.A.S I will take my HS off but for right now it is really the only "education" I have.
Paul Boz wrote: » If you want a great example actually, talk to Dynamik. He's like 45 years old and finishing his degree online. It's a worthless degree in Wildlife Management (slang for his mom's pimp) but still a degree.
Paul Boz wrote: » Have you tried any college at all? If not, at least start taking some classes at a local community college. Fr
Heero wrote: » If you don't have a College diploma (AAS, BS, etc...) You really should list you high school diploma. Some companies have minimum education requirements that require a high school diploma or GED, just like some companies will require a 4 year college degree. I agree that it should be taken off after the first college degree you get.
knwminus wrote: » Oh lol ok now I need to clarify. I am enrolled, and presently 3 quarters from completing an A.A.S in Network Engineering (aka CCNA+ Gen Eds ). What I meant was that my HS diploma was my only diploma I have completed. When I fill out apps I usually put "some college" but the highest level achieved is High School Diploma . I don't think it has hurt me too much though. When I get my A.A.S, my fellow classmates (most are around my age) will just be starting off with A+/N+ and trying to find those types of jobs and I plan to have my CCNP and working on VCP and trying to find those type of jobs.
Paul Boz wrote: » Just leave off the HS diploma and put "some college, currently enrolled."
Paul Boz wrote: » You've still got the best avatar on TE btw.
knwminus wrote: » Interesting. I never would have thought to do that. It is probably way easier for you since you have 7 years of exp and a **** ton of certs though. Although now that I think about it, my current job wanted a BSCS.
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