Is Help Desk a Launchpad or a Dead End? 206
Tracy Mayor writes "Is a gig on an IT help desk really the career death it's always assumed to be? Not always, this Computerworld writer found out, just don't get comfy and stay too long. "
It's currently a problem of access to gigabits through punybaud. -- J. C. R. Licklider
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Unix admins/apps programmers/ and other lofty sorts see it as a dead end so it is, Such are the population here so QED. Most of these articles say something like: "I worked the HD for 6 months then got promoted and.."
FEW remarks come from dedicated tech support pros. People who have worked a desk long enough to know the quirks, know the tricks, know how to keep peopel producti
Maybe they should ask...... (Score:2)
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Added Bonus... (Score:3, Informative)
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Can we get a slashvertisement or shamelessplug tag for this one?
Re:Added Bonus... (Score:5, Informative)
We're not in Kansas anymore Toto. (Score:2)
Not that I want to be chained to a help desk and treated like a slave, but a quick scan of level 1 jobs here in Australia reveals advertised gross wages around 41-43K + 9% super ($AU, super is not taxed, universal health cover (UHC) is a 1.5% tax, 4 weeks paid vacation is the legal minimum and is always included in gross figures). So let's say $45K gross and an Aussie dollar is worth around $0.90 US. That makes it a little over $40K US gross on the first few jobs I f
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Then, they show more knowledge and send it to the wrong department.
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Hell the last company I was at the sysadmin for the entire company was flat out pushing 65k - and we spanned the entire country.
People out here are tight as hell for some reason. My first helldesk job was 36k/year. Every job or company I've contracted out to seems to sit around this point. It's worse if you're not qualified/fresh out of school.
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Boss: Oh sure. Whatever.
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I highly recommend Dorothy Leeds' work, either the original Smart Questions book's chapter on interviewing, or the book spawned from that chapter. It's a lot to remember, but take notes and refer to them when they say, "Do you have any questions." You'll look prepared (hmm, you will be prepared) and
Help desks that push call times and scripts over.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Putting a lot TPS report BS in the help desk is also a bad sign.
There ones that say help desk but you also do network, desktop, imaging, roll outs and other takes as well.
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Who knows (Score:2)
I'd also like to add that the HDI certifications are a joke.
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Here let me fix that for you
HDI certifications are a cruel, joke.
Re:Who knows (Score:5, Insightful)
I did help desk for an ISP. I was never one of the youngest people there and by the time my job was outsourced, I was senior to most of the people in the company. I was still doing help desk, at top level, because I'd come to realize that I actually liked doing it. The trouble-shooting was a constant challenge because no matter how fool-proof you make your software, nature keeps coming up with fools who can manage to mess things up, and with the constantly-changing OS issues of Windows, there was always more to learn. For me, at least, it was a very satisfying job because every day I could go home knowing that there were at least twenty or so people who's days were a little better because I'd helped them. Not everybody can think that way, but if you can, the help desk doesn't have to become the hell desk.
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Never ran across that one, but I know what our policy was: "I'm sorry, that's a hardware issue. Not our responsibility. Get the crazy glue cleaned out if you can or a new port put in. Have a nice day!"
As long as people are allowed to call up in the middle of disasters & scream at yo
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There's nothing wrong with being content in your job and not having a desire to climb the corporate ladder. In the case of Helpdesk work you may one day have
Kind of a silly question (Score:5, Interesting)
Any work dealing with customers will prepare you well for working in any kind of environment where you have to deal with people that are sometimes unreasonable or like to treat others like garbage. In other words, it prepares you to deal with real life. Help desk has the added bonus of being somewhat related to tech stuff, so if you combine it with some learning on your own time, maybe you can end up in a more technical role.
Most companies will tend to recruit from within, so if they see that you're highly technically competent and are good at dealing with people, you're likely to get moved up out of help desk if you make it known that your ultimate goal is, say, system administration (and God help you if it is). If you sit around talking shit about the idiot customers all day when you're not on the phone, you're probably not going anywhere except possibly the unemployment line.
In short, any job will give you what you're willing to get from it. Whether any particular job is a dead end or a door leading to bigger and better things is entirely up to the person doing the job.
On a personal note, I was in help desk for 6 months before being promoted to Unix admin. I got there because I saw a very clear need for improvement in the servers at the company (their Windows mail server was crashing constantly) and I presented a plan to improve things with a Unix-based design and showed I had the technical ability to pull it off. So, they gave me the opportunity, I got the job done, and they promoted me. If you have the drive, any position can be a springboard.
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It takes a good manager to recognize this, but then again, all promotions require that.
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"You either learn out, or you burn out."
That is all.
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
I wasn't thrilled at the time to be working at several of the crappy jobs I had in my you
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If you're over 20 I'd say it's a complete dead end. Once you reach that age, you're labelled a burger flipper for life even if you're assistant manager by that point.
Any work dealing with customers will prepare you well for working in any kind of environment where you have to deal with people that are sometimes unreasonable or like to treat others
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slashvertisement (Score:2)
As for helpdesk, depends on the organization. Pretty much any position could be career-building or dead end depending on the organization and where it's going.
IT seems to get little love in general and helpdesk gets none in particular. I think that it would more often than not be a dead end but it really should be more of a stepping stone in the ideal world. For the new guy just coming into the field, that's the first place he can be of real use. Tha
The ultimate help desk job (Score:2)
The ultimate help desk job was being Bill Gates' technical assistant. There really was such a job, and one of the people who held it now is in charge of the entire Microsoft Office product line.
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Helpdesk is a rite of passage (Score:2)
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Those who haven't had to walk through the coals are far more likely to use the exact tech terms and lose the user claiming superiority and user error instead of lack of communication skills.
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Having worked on both sides of the "glass IT desk", I can confidently say that virtually all problems do result from user error, oftentimes bordering on sheer stupidity.
Sorry, but you can only walk so many people - people who use a Windows machine daily, both for work and at home - through the concept of double-clic
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I am not a jackass!
Don't Stop Learning (Score:2)
Any job is a dead end if you take it as an excuse to stagnate and never learn anything beyond what's needed for competent performance.
The trouble with help desk is the reputation as help desk -- you have to be able to convince people that you know something beyond the job title. Of course,
Help Desk Experience is essential (Score:2)
Its what you make of it (Score:2)
Besides doing my best in the job, and all of these things, I was also searching for a development job within the company.
Less than 2 years after I started as tech support, I am now a developer of a different produc
It depends (Score:2)
In my case, I did an 18 month stint supporting a proprietary case management system (for the State court system). By the time I left, I knew every screen in the app and when people would call in with a question or a problem, I didn't have to look at the screen to know what they were talking about.
I took that knowledge and went in
Some skills are portable (Score:2)
Some of the skills learned at an IT help desk are extremely worthwhile, and very portable. For example, the ability to speak in an accent so incomprehensible that after only a minute or two, the person at the other end will utter a soundless cry of inchoate fury and slam down the phone. This invaluable skill can get a telemarketer off the line when even an air horn fails.
If your training includes that particular accent so thick that even a fellow East Asian shakes his head and says, "Huh?", you can pre
Lessons learned .... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Jumping ship at 1 year intervals look a bit questionable on a resume. Stick it out a bit and then go look for someone who will pay you what you're worth.
Learning is great, but try to stick to technologies that have a future. With the H1 craze, companies are addicted to hiring talent who already has the experience in whatever languages/dev environment they want, instead of say training people like we did before. After all, if these people don't work out you can
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Two years ago the company I was with had
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Last company I left - I worked my ass off for an internal promotion, and they finally approved the new req, and I went through formal interviews, got the job, and they lowballed me with some BS "HR policy says nobody gets more than 6% increase without VP approval."
I said "bye".
. . . and got 15% at my next job.
Note to HR departments:
You will not retain talent if your raises do not keep up with inflation.
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It always amazes me how quickly the "I'm right, you're way is wrong" people get tagged in I.T. departments. They're the ones who never advance, because the supervisors see them as not wanting to learn.
Re:Lessons learned .... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the best advice you can give for ANY job, not just IT. Nothing pisses me off faster than a worker who doesn't know how to do something and refuses to learn. A human being who is lazy and incurious is absolutely worthless.
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Good form sir.
Definitely not a launchpad (Score:2)
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If time in QA didn't help make you a better developer, or you can't at least spin it so it sounds like your time in QA made you a better developer, well, the world needs ditch diggers, too.
Yes, I am out in the real world. Working as a developer. And I have QA on my resume. And, get this, it's not even software QA.
But perhaps I'm able to convince employers that I'm a big, throbbing brain bec
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Could go either way. (Score:2)
Depends on the type of helpdesk too. (Score:2)
Of course help desks today are manned by someone laughs when they say, "oh the software is not supposed to let you do that" after it wiped your hard drive. (Avanquest Partition Commander).
Is Help Desk a Launchpad or a Dead End? (Score:2)
A great start (Score:2)
I remained passionate and driven, and moved around enough to be exposed to myriads of technologies. Volunteered lots of time to F/OSS and non-profit causes (still do) to keep sharp, busy, and seasoned.
I really feel that all of these little pieces add to success, for any IT pro who insists on professional growth.
Total: $0.02
DUH. (Score:2)
If you land in the help desk in a decent sized company, and have any brains at all, you're out in a year, 18 months tops. On the flip side, if you end up a shitty company. You'll know within six months, and be working someplace else in 12.
People that have been help desk for five+ years scare me.
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Why? Because we know the product inside out, can solve problems you've never heard of before just by recognizing the symptoms and like what we're doing?
Real help desk salaries (Score:2)
Salary Guide (Score:2)
There is a small salary guide [computerworld.com] in the article, I think that should have been linked to instead.
Every IT person should start at the helpdesk (Score:5, Insightful)
In my experience, the number one problem with IT is that the programmers and managers really don't have enough interaction with the end users to understand their side of things. Every time there's an outtage because someone kicked the cord out of a server, or every patch that breaks usability in the name of some wizzbang feature, it really falls on the helpdesk to manage and do damage control while you're out "on break".
To the rest of the company, the helpdesk is literally the face of the IT department. They're the ones who get to deal with irate customers, desperate password seekers, and the social manipulators.
On the help desk, you learn every quirk of every system your company supports. You learn all the "unofficial" tricks that get things done, regardless of policy or procedure. Most importantly, you learn who to call when situations arise you can't handle. You know *everyone*, so that when application Z is causing catastrophic system failures on your server farm you know exactly who to go to to make it stop.
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I agree. I've been working in a medium sized organisation (~400 people, all in one building) for about three years now. We don't have a dedicated helpdesk team apart for a single part-timer whose responsibility is to organise everyone else and chase people up to make sure the less interesting calls get answered.
Obviously this wo
Don't think of it as just Help Desk (Score:3, Interesting)
If you're starting off in the help desk, be aware that working in a help desk is part of a much larger ecosystem known as IT Service Management. If you're interested in furthering your career, explore as much information around the ITSM space as possible, especially as it relates to the IT Infrastructure Library (ITIL) process framework.
According to Gartner, of those publicly traded companies which have revenues in excess of $1 billion/yr, 90% of them either have implemented an ITIL process framework, are in the process of implementing one, or are strongly considering implementing one. ITSM is a huge marketplace, with tons of opportunity, and few active practitioners who are both experienced and forward thinking. It's a perfect place to write your own ticket and have a strong future in IT, as well as work with multi-national companies in shaping how they manage IT.
Recognizing the help desk's (or Service Desk) place in this ecosystem will help you parlay your position into having a role in shaping how IT organizations define, build, launch, operate and improve IT Services back to their customers.
Service Desk forms a critical part of an IT organization, where Incidents, Problems and Changes are managed and communicated. Known how Change interacts with Release and Configuration Management. Know how these in turn work in tandem with Capacity, Availability, Service Level Management, etc.
ITSM professionals are in demand. I'm currently hiring 4 ITSM professionals, whose salaries are in the $125k - $150k range. Many of the individuals currently working for me started off in help desk. It's all about your own personal initiative. If you see a help desk gig as a dead end, it will be. However, if you can see the larger picture, you can work your way up to a very rewarding and profitable career in IT Service Management.
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So, what exactly is an "Infrastructure Library process framework"? How do you define "service management"? Why are you capitalizing random words as if they are divine concepts, such as "Incidents, Problems and Changes?" We Slashdotters tend to appreciate posts that contain information, not management buzzword doublespeak. Do you have a 6-Sigma black belt, too?
Ahh, you must not have had the pleasure of being indoctrinated into the latest Six Sigma-ISO9000-Corporate Bullshit buzzword land of ITIL. Basically a way for large Independent Software Vendors to come in and sell you a shiny new helpdesk ticket system, (because your old one isn't ITIL compliant) and charge you for a half-dozen Cognizant or Infosys contractors to customize it to the point where you can't figure out even how to open a ticket, making you wonder why you ever got rid of the old system which yo
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You can deride ITIL as a fad, or a buzzword, but the fact remains that billion-dollar companies are choosing to use ITIL, which is an open process framework, of their own accord. There is value in standardizing the way that IT companies manage their operations along an op
Good Timing (Score:2)
I started out as a workstation helpdesk jockey, driving from school to school doing basic workstation, network, and server duties. Nothing too fancy, just repairing older PIIs and PIIIs, adding users into a Novell environment, and patching/unpatching ports as needed. The nice side was being able to drive locally, get reimbursed for mileage at a decent rate, and getting close to the staff members and faculty a
Just think small .. (Score:2)
Other things to note. If you're working for a company that does contract and outsource help desk, make sure it's the kind where you are on-site. There
Size Matters (quit snickering) (Score:2)
AOL Desk Experience (Score:2, Interesting)
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When lightning has fried something or there is noise on the line and you tell the customer that fixing the problem is in their hands not yours, nine times out of ten they will cancel their account and tell you to go to Hell if you come of
Don't want to leave. (Score:2)
It led me to a much higher level (Score:2)
However, I was able to make a lot of progress for the client -- standardizing Help Desk procedures, documenting handoff procedures to (and responsibilities of) other teams within IT, and coming up with some technical stuff they hadn't even imagined. (Two words: "batch file").
Then, in 2003, my company tried to sell the client on a
Insensitive Clod (Score:2)
Jerk.
The long and short of it... (Score:2, Funny)
Short answer: Yes
Long answer: Yyyyyyyyyyyeeeeeeeeeeeeesssssssss
Not a dead end, but - (Score:2)
This is it's own advantage and disadvantage - the advantage is that you get to see more of an organization - I work for a corporate helpdesk here in the U.S. that goes toe to toe with the Indian companies by justifying our greater expense with stronger customer service and a range of skills. I have talked to clients in Japan, Germany, Korea,China, Mexico - well, just about everywhere, doing just
Transportation Analogies (Score:2)
[ ] Dead End
[X] Rest Stop
In so many ways...
First hand experience (Score:2)
I worked at a major ISP helpdesk for a period of time while I finished my college degree. It was a good place gain experience in the basics of computer troubleshooting remotely with people (some glad to talk to a human, others just dumber than a bag
It depends on the kind of help desk (Score:2)
The only real obstacles to progressing from this kind of role are either not enough or too much ambition(ie folks who don't care and don't try and folks who think that having done a year of help desk makes them qualified to be sys admi
Pigeon hole. (Score:2)
At 20/21 I moved to a company that paid a little better, but I was a mobile systems administrator/general tech of anything they needed done. It was a tackle anything position and really job function wise what most techs shoot for.
We partnered up
No, we can't. (Score:2)
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"made of fail". Duh.
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Operations is dead end, at least where I work. I do web development, but we are nestled within operations. We have an amazing shrinking budget and things like promotions are nigh impossible. Getting a piece of software is nearly impossible if it costs any real money. Why? We are in operations. Operations is a commodity and an expense, or at least is viewed as such by upper management.
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You are an expense. (Score:2)
Unless your company makes money off your work don't expect to be treated like a rock star. Even if you develop profitable products expect to be treated like a rock star in the 50s. That is to say learn to negotiate with weasels.
Better technical people seek out companies that make money doing technical things.
Working for banks etc on internal software is only a stepping stone to better things, crunchier problems and fatter paychecks.
If your companies ultimate product is a commodity the company will be
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I guess the trick is to get in some place where a promotion doesn't mean you move from junior phone monkey to senior phone monkey, or to already have 20 years of experience.
4 years is far too long. (Score:2)
Your resume will be radioactive with that stain on it.
Say you were in Prison instead.
Or just flat out lie and say you are a network tech.
Seriously you need to move anywhere else NOW.
Get a job with Geek squad if that's all you can get.
Don't take another pure help desk position.
Find a small company where you'll wear many hats, but have a non-help desk job title.
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$33,000
IT Help Desk Technician
$30,000
Help Desk Support Technician
$32,000
Help Desk Technician Tier
$28,000
Hardware Support Technician
$33,000
Fire Dispatcher
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A good clue: find out who has the positions that you aspire to in a company in which you either work or are considering working at. Then, find out if they came up from the ranks, or came from elsewhere. If it looks like no one came up from below, keep looking elsewhere