Help Desk Engineer position

Hello All,
I started working as an Help Desk Engineer at an private equity company. This is an entry-level position I got soon after I finished school. What advice do I need to stand out to the upper management?
I started working as an Help Desk Engineer at an private equity company. This is an entry-level position I got soon after I finished school. What advice do I need to stand out to the upper management?
Comments
Always ask questions to your superiors about their jobs / tasks. Take an interest in it and learn from them. Master all your current responsibilities and grow (by studies, certs, education, interest in growing within the company , etc).
Have a good attitude and personality. This counts for a lot more than what people think.
Also I would not get to personal with everyone right away. Keep personal opinions about Court cases, Politics, Religion, to your self. This stuff just creates a bad atmosphere without you even knowing it.
Words to live by. Not only will it help you in your professional life but it will do so for your personal life as well.
+ rep...
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/lewislampkin (Please connect: Just say you're from TechExams.Net!)
By the way, as a graduate from a tough, accredited Engineering program. I have some problem with your job title (I know it is not you that came up with it).
Help Desk has nothing to do with engineering...
Similar to how some Salesmens has the title Sales Engineer...
CUCM SRND 9x/10, UCCX SRND 10x, QOS SRND, SIP Trunking Guide, anything contact center related
My only rule of engagement is something I got from blackrouter. In a post, he said that he aims to do what others won't. Your work ethic, attitude, and ambition speaks volumes.
[backstory] I worked help desk for 3 months with no prior experience (well, working experience) and was promoted twice. Left there to work for another company where I was supposed to be a network technician but in reality, I was just desktop support. I left there in 6 months because it was no room for growth and I reached a ceiling in 2 months at my position. I didn't learn anything new (actually, I was the one being sent out when there was a network issue). I was working on getting my CCNA while everyone else was too busy being complacent. I left their to take my current position as a Jr. Network Engineer. [/backstory]
Never limit yourself. It may be people in your office who has been in the same position for years and might try to crap on your ambition (that happened when I worked help desk). Ignore them. In this field, we are captain of our fate. Your rise and fall ultimately lies on you.
This is very good advice. I was promoted quickly due to my willingness to take whatever tickets came across no matter how mundane or complex they were. Don't be afraid to take challenging tickets, but at the same time make sure it is something you could figure out in a timely manner if its an urgent issue. Also don't be afraid of asking questions. This helped me to spend only a few months in the NOC before being promoted into engineering.
Life is a matter of choice not chance. The path to your destiny will be paved by the decisions that you make every day.