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Greg Neilson
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Just What Are You Waiting For? |
Greg shares with you the advice he gave to his IT staff: Own your career now, or face losing it later. |
by Greg Neilson |
10/9/2002 -- The following is based on an e-mail I sent to my staff this week. While many of them are doing a great job at keeping themselves current with the latest technologies, there are too many for whom I feel I am more interested in their career than they are. Many CertCities.com readers will similarly already be actively managing their skills growth, but this column may be of benefit for those still employed in IT who don't now feel the same need to keep themselves up to date. This discusses Windows NT skills, but many of the same arguments could be made about COBOL programmers, for example.
Today is the first week of October. That means we now have only 12 weeks left this year. Many of you have talked about wanting to improve yourselves technically and complete a certification, yet from my view less than a handful of you seem serious enough about this to actually achieve anything in 2002.
I admit that I am an extreme case and am always driven to continually learn more, but I still find myself alarmed at how complacent and comfortable many of you seem to be in your career in IT. It's as if you would be happy just toiling away with NT 4.0 for the rest of your working life, even if that was another 20, 30 or 40 years away. But NT 4.0 is now six years old, and one could make a good argument that this version was merely another of the incremental upgrades to NT since the original release in 1993. That makes this technology essentially nine years old! Many of you were not even working in IT back in 1993.
Even the NT follow-on product, Win2K, is almost three years old, yet the majority of you don't have extensive skills with it. In an era where companies have been cutting education dollars we have done very well to get everyone attending Win2K education, yet I acknowledge that these classes alone can never be enough. You will always need to supplement classroom education with self-study in your own time. Completing a certification program then after attending classes is not only useful to readily demonstrate your skills, but also to retain and build on the learning from those courses.
I've alluded to forthcoming technology changes, and I'm sure that you all know that Windows .NET Server is destined for release early in 2003. But if we look at the bigger stage, there's so much more. The R&D now underway by some of the main software vendors will lead to systems that will require much less staff to actually build and manage them. Those staff still required will be those highly skilled people who configure and monitor the health of these essentially self-managing systems.
From a business viewpoint, companies in around the world are very interested in the outsourcing opportunities offered from countries such as India. In the past, this has been primarily in the area of application development, but with the rapidly growing communications capabilities available worldwide, this has increasingly led to this being used for systems management outsourcing as well. As I see it, there is no way that we can compete on price alone, so one option available is to concentrate on the more higher-level value-added services. When building and managing servers becomes a commodity, then we are going to need specialized skills and capabilities to stay ahead of the game. Otherwise, we will likely be forced into a change of career outside IT. (I'm not here to debate the merits of globalization, but I simply want to acknowledge it and outline how we might adjust to it).
Let's also look at the positive side of the future. I think most industry commentators are of the view that IT activity will start to pick up from the current levels within six to 12 months. This will mean that we will need people to take a lead role in important and exciting projects that implement these newer hot technologies. These exciting opportunities will likely present themselves to those who are most qualified for them -- to the high performers with demonstrated higher levels of skill.
In this day and age, we will never have lifetime employment, but we can work hard to ensure that we have lifetime employability. I can assist you here in your career development, but you owe it to yourself to OWN your career. Many of the changes I have talked about here are not going happen overnight -- or perhaps not even next year -- but who can say where things will be in five years time or longer? All of the above is just my personal view, and is intended only to get you actively thinking about your future. Just what are you waiting for? 
Questions? Comments? Post your thoughts below!
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Greg Neilson, MCSE+Internet, MCNE, PCLP, is a Contributing Editor for Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine and a manager at a large IT services firm in Australia. He's the author of Lotus Domino Administration in a Nutshell (O'Reilly and Associates, ISBN 1-56592-717-6). You can reach him at Attn: Greg.
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More articles by Greg Neilson:
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There are 50 user Comments for “Just What Are You Waiting For?”
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Page 3 of 5
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10/17/02: DaRkNeSs says: |
I meant no offense, when I said "Apu should stick with the quicky mart" I was reffering to the Apu from the Simpsons. And to Becky, I am just trying to have a little fun in my posts is all and I would not be suprised if "Apu" is the one who is being rude by spamming. His posts seem like more of a joke than anything else. I think you (Becky) saying my post was rude is like the pot calling the kettle black. enough said |
10/17/02: DaRkNeSs says: |
And its DaRkNeSs not DaRkNess |
10/18/02: Stephanie says: |
DaRkNeSs - Quit spamming and get a life. |
10/19/02: DaRkNeSs says: |
Stephanie - Quit spamming and get a Dike! |
10/20/02: Moschino says: |
Thanx Mr Neilson. I get your point of view and understand what you mean exactly. Work hard, understand concept and then prove it -Pass the exam and get certificate- I don't understand why people on this forum are discussing? The message's clear. Mr Neilson doesn' t say "Take a certificate" He says not to waste your time!!!Work, learn and then prove it! Certification is important even you believe o not. |
10/21/02: Wombat says: |
It is pretty clear that most people are looking for a shortcut. This is fine as a start, but once a large number of people take the same shortcut, the value of the certification decreases. People don't really want valid certifications, they want their way of obtaining the certification recognized as the valid way. They also want the drawbridge pulled up once they get their cert. Typer-memorizers have it in for functional literates, and vice-versa. The answer is more valid tests of what employers really want. |
10/21/02: Tim says: |
Hi Tracy, How long should I cook the pie for? At what temperature. Thanks! |
10/21/02: Morgan Tyler says: |
Ive been MCSE (since 2000), CNE (since 1997) and A+ since earlier this year. I've contract experience since 1997. Take it from me, working at Walmart is more stable! Dont bother wasting your time! |
10/22/02: eyeccd says: |
MCSE certification does serve a purpose. In my case, I've been trying to do a career change from a life(?) of 17 years in warehousing and distribution to the high-tech world of computers. I got my MCSE in Nov. 2000. Been out of of work since Sept. 2001. The longest job I have had so far during 2002 lasted almost 2 weeks. I admit I'm a paper MCSE, but I'm trying to get enough experience so I at LEAST have enough confidence in myself, which I still do not have. Unemployment, including the extension died on me around end of July, start of Aug. 2002. Since that time, have had no money coming in, except for the last almost 2week job. And that one, a friend got me into it; local company, NT4 shop. they wanted me to configure Outloook so they could share folders, calendars, etc., without Exchange. They couldn't afford to BUY Exchange OR Windows 2000 Server. THEY were the ones that offered me $25.00/hr; I just didn't turn it down. They let me go, claiming they were having "critical financial stress". I still haven't been paid yet from last week I was there (last day was Sept.12). Tell, me HOW does a "paper MCSE" get to NOT be a paper MCSE anymore? I'm so sick and tired of havingto wait for weeks at a time to hear back from employers. I start tomorrow the the local airport as a Package Handler for FedEx. Supposedly part-time, but permanent. With all of my "qualifications", (MCP,MCP+I,MCSE,CCNA)all I can get is slinging boxes at FedEx. Maybe my "girlfirend" is right, I should just give up. I wanted to ask her to get married two years ago. I can't even get any kind of recognition that I know what I know. I wish I was dead. |
10/23/02: Wombat says: |
If you actually know your stuff, what you need to do is get your foot in the door. Lie on your resume. You may need to get someone to pose as the tech supervisor of somewhere the new employer calls for verification of employment. I got my foot in the door by claiming to be from a now-defunct dot com. Once you are hired, no one cares if you can do the job. |
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