Compare cert salaries and plan your next career move
tkerber wrote: » As someone who also just put in his notice at an MSP to take a Senior Analyst position I can agree with this. For any of you looking to join in on an MSP, all I can say is--it is a completely different beast. I came from an internal position with a large company that was very well organized. Their documentation was in all honesty--beautiful and their procedures and protocols were all very easy to follow and easy to find. I left for the opportunity to diversify my experience at an MSP. However, I have to say the organization and documentation is an atrocity. I go to sites on a daily basis that I've never been to and have no idea how things were setup or how I'm even supposed to fix them. I am on call and constantly glued to my email and phone. Your work hours are a lot longer if you travel because traffic and drive times vary--often times I'll be at a site 45 minutes away from my house or further. Lastly, the thing you have to realize about working for an MSP is that most of these companies hire MSPs because they're cheap. Meaning they look at IT as just a necessary cost of business and don't like spending money on new infrastructure and support or cannot afford their own in house IT personnel. So is the experience great? Absolutely. Is the job different and diverse? Yes! But depending on how big of an MSP you work for and how they operate, it can really be a lot of frustration. I know some guys who work for other MSPs and they sing the same song. tl;dr I'm also leaving an MSP and I think I'm going to be happy to come back to a large organization.. Especially a big tech company.
--chris-- wrote: » @Jibba, big congrats! Is this a move you had been planning for awhile? I also work for an MSP. I think the companies overall setup can make a big difference in how you view the work and the enviroment. We have pretty good documentation for each customer, if the documentation is lacking we are encouraged to create/improve it. Us road guys get company cars. We are paid the moment we leave our house in the morning until the moment we get back home + whatever remote work we might do at night. I don't know if this its like this at other MSPs, but we have A TON of paper work and documentation to perform daily. It accounts for 20-25% of my time. Its not really a down side since its usually technical writing (making guides, instructions, policies, etc...) but the accounting aspect of it is a drag (we produce receipts on the spot for payments above and beyond the monthly management fee).
dave330i wrote: » GL as a Sr. Consultant. Do you know if you're going to be a long term consultant or troubleshooter?
cyberguypr wrote: » Ah! Exit interviews: one of those things that I always say "thanks but no thanks!"
Rakurai wrote: » What MSP if you don't mind me asking. I am actually interviewing to a network engineer at one right now. Any horror stories from the one you are leaving?
--chris-- wrote: » @Jibba, big congrats! Is this a move you had been planning for awhile?.
Compare salaries for top cybersecurity certifications. Free download for TechExams community.