[AusNOG] Starting green at 23. What does the industry want from me?
Paul Wilkins
paulwilkins369 at gmail.com
Wed Mar 15 10:09:53 EST 2017
Rory,
I'd advise against networking as a potential career path. 1) No one's
building data centres, except the cloud providers, who operate at massive
scale where most of the provisioning work is automated. 2) Software defined
networking/networking as a service again, means we're seeing fewer jobs in
the market. So it would be a poor choice moving into a market that's
consolidating, the work available will go to those with experience, and
most of those in work in the networking industry will be moving into other
industries over the next 10 years.
If you want to be breaking into IT, cloud or layers above the network stack
are where the future opportunities will be.
Kind regards
Paul Wilkins
On 15 March 2017 at 02:45, Seamus Ryan <seamus at plur.com.au> wrote:
> Hi Rory,
>
> Everyone has to start somewhere. Speaking entirely from experience, and I
> am sure others will have a different story as to how they got to where they
> are now, my suggestion is to start at the bottom. Showing you are willing
> to do the "hard yards" before you get to the "fun stuff" can go a long way
> with employers.
> How are your customer service skills? Can you keep your cool under
> pressure, show a real passion for clients? Be keen to see issues through
> till the end and ensure the customer is happy as can be?
> If so, start looking for service desk style jobs at a telco/ service
> provider that interests you. Solid customer service skills are essential in
> an IT world. Remember the customer isn't always external, land yourself in
> the right job/position further down the track and you may find yourself
> dealing entirely with internal staff. You can become the guy people
> actually want to approach when they have a problem, or maybe continue with
> external issues, there are loads of options.
> Show you are keen to do this and you will get noticed. Provide possible
> fixes to problems when escalating them, who cares if its wrong. The fact
> that you tried and showed some initiative is what people like to see.
> Strive to understand more!
> When someone hands me a problem of some sorts it usually has a domain
> associated with it. I will sit there and dig dns records, MX's, run curls,
> telnets, traceroutes, AS lookups, test mail server responses, check
> ciphers, and finally i may actually browse to the site itself. The actual
> problem may have nothing to do with the above but understanding how things
> are setup before tackling the issue can go a long way.
>
> Don't get bogged down with degrees (certainly not saying don't get one,
> just remember they don't guarantee a job at the end of the day. I would
> love to have one now, finding the time is the hard part!) Focus on
> certifications, but again remember its just a piece of paper with no
> promises attached.
> This industry looks for experience, just aim to get as much as you can
> while also tucking a few certs etc under your belt.
>
> Will reply off list with some personal recommendations.
>
> -Seamus
>
> Sent from my Windows Phone
> ------------------------------
> From: Rory Jones <rory.jones.au at gmail.com>
> Sent: 15/03/2017 1:14 AM
> To: ausnog at ausnog.net
> Subject: [AusNOG] Starting green at 23. What does the industry want from
> me?
>
> Hey guys, been reading the list quietly for a while now, so I profusely
> apologies for being off-topic, given the highly professional and formal
> qualities of this mailing list. An admin may request a stop if necessary,
> but I would appreciate any and all feedback.
>
> I am 23 years old, based in Brisbane (but willing to move, have
> deliberately kept my life in boxes to somewhat more readily facilitate
> this), and I am looking for a start anywhere in IT or Telco.
>
> Basically I’ve been trying to start my career in IT for quite a long time
> now, way too long, really. I eventually got fed up (after about 5 years),
> and decided to pursue a path of throwing tools and swear words at cars with
> a friend. That went on for a year or two, until I ran out of “startup
> funds” (if you could call them that - really just my inheritance), and it
> grew more and more apparent that we had very different ways of working,
> with my philosophy of taking a step back for 10 or 15 minutes to research
> something and do it right the first time, versus his… pretty much the
> direct opposite. Anyway, I digress.
>
> After learning a few things about myself - namely how other people
> mentioned that I’m a stunningly quick learner - having gone from being
> scared to do oil changes, to full on engine replacements and nuts and bolts
> rebuilds in about 9 months - I’m being thrust back into the IT/Telco
> market, which is really where I’ve wanted to be all along, especially the
> latter, given why I’m posting here.
>
> I’m posting to ask how I can make myself more employable, given it seems
> impossible for me to penetrate the HR firewall, and no one seems to want to
> tell me why. I have a suspicion it’s because I can’t do interviews well, at
> all. I tend to be a nervous wreck in them, however this has never reflected
> in my work experience at all. I am decent at chats though. I can *show* you
> what I know, where I excel, where I fall down, and where my interests seem
> to lie. But formal interviews… just never got the hang of it, despite
> having quite a few now.
>
> Everyone I ask, seems to have a different answer. I’m pretty sure I need
> to study and/or find a way in the door *somewhere*, even if it’s plugging
> cables into a rack or cleaning the toilets or something. I have studied a
> generic networking diploma with a CCNA, virtual machines, basic security
> and wireless all tacked onto the sides of it. I really, really enjoyed the
> networking side of things especially, with an odd penchant for wireless but
> the caveat of “I am really bad at maths and theory”, but I am not sure
> where to go from there. It’s really hard to gauge what the industry wants,
> where it’s heading, and what is wanted or expected of people who wish to
> remain successful in it, much less make a start at all.
>
> I even had a work experience gig a while ago where I was assisting in
> installing access points into an apartment building. I enjoyed that. But
> where my real passions are, is in datacenters. I absolutely freakin’ love
> datacanters. I love the idea of designing, building, running and
> maintaining them. I love the idea of managing power, cooling and building
> requirements, as an outsider looking in through a mouldy old window, it all
> seems like a balancing act. I like that sort of thing. I love
> infrastructure in general, I think what PIPE Networks, AARNet and all the
> rest do is bloody cool, and I long for a career doing that. I long for a
> career working in a NOC. But I have not a clue on how to get there.
>
> I was even approached a few years ago, if I had a licence and could move
> to Sydney, I would have a traineeship in designing and building datacenters
> all over the world. I was heartbroken that I couldn’t accept it, because I
> didn’t have a licence or a car at the time. I’ve got those now, but too
> little, too late. I’m still heartbroken, that job would have been a dream
> come true.
>
> But now I’m in a somewhat… better(?) position. I have my own car. I can
> and will move to any funny sounding name with a postcode in this vast
> country tomorrow, if it resulted in work. Still, I’m stuck with the same
> old things. I’ve tweaked my resume and cover letter over and over again,
> trying to make it the best it can be. I’m looking for new things to study -
> right now highly considering RHCSA or some form of PluralSight
> qualification - unless anyone here can recommend something more network-y
> and telco-y based that is industry relevant, I would start studying that
> the second I received a reply pointing it out.
>
> This email has gone on a bit, so I shall leave it at here for now. But I’m
> just not sure where to go next. I would love to have a start right in
> telco, networks or datacenters, but it seems like I have to make my start
> elsewhere, even if it’s something like a level 1 helpdesk support, which I
> would still be happy as Larry if I got, but it would be a literal dream
> come true for the aforementioned flavours of IT.
>
> Sorry again for the walls of text, and sorry again for being off-topic. I
> hope I don’t clog up too many inboxes!
>
> Many thanks in advance, all,
> Rory
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