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    IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices

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    • DashrenderD
      Dashrender @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

      @Dashrender said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

      @Breffni-Potter said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

      Now if IT don't want a consultant and management does want one in the room...there is something going on there which you need to pay attention to. Even if no consultant appears, think about what might happen next.

      Interesting - I kinda find this insulting - but at the same time I see your point. The IT team shouldn't be afraid of being audited. But unless the IT team itself says that they don't have the skill set to do a job, it seems more like management doesn't trust their IT team to 'do their job' if the consultant is there for anything more than a audit.

      I agree that everyone needs to have someone look over their should from time to time to make sure they didn't do something crazy or loose their way, but to bring in a consultant for a second opinion without your IT team saying they don't feel up to the task - I gotta ask, why are those people working for you?

      What's that phrase that management uses..... trust but audit.

      This doesn't apply to IT, it applies to everything. It's not insulting, it's actually an indication that management sees IT as a meaningful business function. If they didn't audit, wouldn't that imply that they don't feel that IT matters?

      And no matter what internal IT thinks that it knows and can do, there is a value to auditing to find out if outsiders with more and different exposure agree.

      I did say that audits are expected and a good thing and IT should welcome it.

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • A
        AshKetchum
        last edited by

        Below is one of our consultant’s sentiments (1st year as a consultant – we are the Guinea pig) and reasoning.
        • I want to fully manage the active directory including adding users, printer, and the simplest thing.
        • If you remove that of my responsibilities, I can’t guarantee I will be able to help you with outages or issues as I’m not the one managing it. – is this correct? What is the acceptable help I can get from the consultant for issues or outages?

        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @AshKetchum
          last edited by

          @AshKetchum said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

          Below is one of our consultant’s sentiments (1st year as a consultant – we are the Guinea pig) and reasoning.
          • I want to fully manage the active directory including adding users, printer, and the simplest thing.
          • If you remove that of my responsibilities, I can’t guarantee I will be able to help you with outages or issues as I’m not the one managing it. – is this correct? What is the acceptable help I can get from the consultant for issues or outages?

          So consultant is a VERY general term. It pretty much means "not a reseller" and tons of resellers style themselves as consultants because one sounds cool and technical and the other sounds like you work at Best Buy - so there is a stigma and everyone wants to say "consultant" at neighbourhood parties, even though sales people earn more.

          Consultant here sounds like an MSP or an IT oursourcer. Nothing wrong with that, we do that, and he has a point, if he isn't managing things, how can he know what you've done. BUT the issue is, we don't know what his JOB is.

          So I work for NTG.... you can...

          • Hire us to BE your IT department. If you want guarantees, hell yeah we aren't letting anyone else touch the stuff. You don't get to mention "guarantee" or finger pointing if you let people we don't control do anything at all. That would be insane.
          • Hire us to HELP your IT department. We are there to offload work, assist when people get busy, sick or stuck, answer questions, fix things that are broken, etc. You don't get a guarantee, because we aren't the ones to hold accountable. We are there to help the existing people.

          Of course he can't guarantee anything. If management asked for a guarantee, then they clearly lack the business skills necessary to interface with any outside contractor. If the consultant brought this up when asked what he needs to be able to help you, he is clearly not prepared to do the work. There is a problem here, but from the outside we can't tell who is the one that has it.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            What does he "want" to manage AD? That's a very basic task. What makes that the task for him to do? Why is the consultant determining which tasks he will do rather than you or management?

            As a consultant, I can tell you, we "want" to do as much work as you will give us. We get paid to do work, our goal is to do more of it. We never want "less" work, that would be silly. That's like McDonald's wanting to sell fewer French fries. If we wanted less work, we'd just stop working and go out of business...problem solved with maximum efficiency.

            So what the consultant wants is irrelevant and silly to bring up. Sure he wants that. But does he get it?

            A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • A
              AshKetchum @scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              @scottalanmiller he wanted to do everything. If we need to add user we will email him then he will do it. We want to add printer we need to contact him and he will configure it and we will be on the site to plug the printer for him while he configure everything remotely. So basically internal IT cannot even add printer in the network if we follow the consultants directive. lolz

              Minion QueenM DashrenderD scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • C
                Carnival Boy @c00l.ice
                last edited by

                @c00l.ice said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                Local IT Team is capable of doing the day to day operations and management needed for all of the below. Where should a consultant fit it?

                In our case, we're the local IT team capable of handling day to day operations. We're all generalists because we work for an SMB. We know a fair a bit about most things, but we're not experts. There are times when we need to bring in an expert, and that's where we employ consultants.

                It's like when I go and see my local doctor. Most of the time he can fix me. But there are times when he needs to send me to see a consultant at the hospital.

                But I don't expect an individual consultant to be a generalist. I expect them to be a specialist - expert in their field, but ignorant of most other fields. Just like heart specialist the hospital isn't going to fix my broken leg. So either engage with an IT company that employs a number of different specialists (an Exchange guy, a VMware guy) or I employ a number of different individual companies that focus on one thing.

                A scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Minion QueenM
                  Minion Queen Banned @AshKetchum
                  last edited by

                  @AshKetchum said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                  @scottalanmiller he wanted to do everything. If we need to add user we will email him then he will do it. We want to add printer we need to contact him and he will configure it and we will be on the site to plug the printer for him while he configure everything remotely. So basically internal IT cannot even add printer in the network if we follow the consultants directive. lolz

                  Wow he was trying to replace you. A business should always have control of how little or how much an external contractor does. Doesn't matter if it is IT or Accounting or the person who changes the light bulbs.

                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DashrenderD
                    Dashrender @AshKetchum
                    last edited by

                    @AshKetchum said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                    @scottalanmiller he wanted to do everything. If we need to add user we will email him then he will do it. We want to add printer we need to contact him and he will configure it and we will be on the site to plug the printer for him while he configure everything remotely. So basically internal IT cannot even add printer in the network if we follow the consultants directive. lolz

                    Sounds like he's trying to displace you. What will your job be if he is doing all the IT? You're just a bench tech if your only job is to swap out hardware. Is that what management wants you to become?

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Deleted74295D
                      Deleted74295 Banned @Dashrender
                      last edited by

                      @Dashrender said

                      Interesting - I kinda find this insulting - it seems more like management doesn't trust their IT team to 'do their job' if the consultant is there for anything more than a audit.

                      Remember the Bobs? They are consultants too...

                      0_1473347467548_upload-814565f9-f047-46aa-90c2-abc8979f81af

                      If management feels a consultant is ever needed, you need to determine the why.

                      • Is it because removals are on the horizon?
                      • Has management lost trust in IT? (If so why? Can it be fixed)
                      • Do they just want to confirm everything is going ok with a second opinion.

                      Once everyone is on board with why X is happening, the process is a lot better for all.

                      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Deleted74295D
                        Deleted74295 Banned
                        last edited by

                        Having said that, watching a consultant swapping our entry level GPUs on 2 desktops was a sight to behold.

                        All consultants are equal but some are more equal than others.

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                        • DashrenderD
                          Dashrender @Deleted74295
                          last edited by Dashrender

                          @Breffni-Potter said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                          @Dashrender said

                          Interesting - I kinda find this insulting - it seems more like management doesn't trust their IT team to 'do their job' if the consultant is there for anything more than a audit.

                          Remember the Bobs? They are consultants too...

                          If management feels a consultant is ever needed, you need to determine the why.

                          • Is it because removals are on the horizon?
                          • Has management lost trust in IT? (If so why? Can it be fixed)
                          • Do they just want to confirm everything is going ok with a second opinion.

                          Once everyone is on board with why X is happening, the process is a lot better for all.

                          yep yep. This was mainly what I was driving at with the insult part above.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • A
                            AshKetchum @Carnival Boy
                            last edited by

                            @Carnival-Boy said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                            @c00l.ice said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                            Local IT Team is capable of doing the day to day operations and management needed for all of the below. Where should a consultant fit it?

                            In our case, we're the local IT team capable of handling day to day operations. We're all generalists because we work for an SMB. We know a fair a bit about most things, but we're not experts. There are times when we need to bring in an expert, and that's where we employ consultants.

                            It's like when I go and see my local doctor. Most of the time he can fix me. But there are times when he needs to send me to see a consultant at the hospital.

                            But I don't expect an individual consultant to be a generalist. I expect them to be a specialist - expert in their field, but ignorant of most other fields. Just like heart specialist the hospital isn't going to fix my broken leg. So either engage with an IT company that employs a number of different specialists (an Exchange guy, a VMware guy) or I employ a number of different individual companies that focus on one thing.

                            So basically, you contact a specialist consultant based on your requirements. That's better, because here the consultant contact the vendor so if we have issue with the firewall we need to pass the consultant first before contacting the vendor for firewall.

                            Deleted74295D scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • Deleted74295D
                              Deleted74295 Banned @AshKetchum
                              last edited by

                              @AshKetchum said

                              So basically, you contact a specialist consultant based on your requirements. That's better, because here the consultant contact the vendor so if we have issue with the firewall we need to pass the consultant first before contacting the vendor for firewall.

                              That's not a consultant.

                              That's a reseller pretending to be a consultant.

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @AshKetchum
                                last edited by

                                @AshKetchum said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                @scottalanmiller he wanted to do everything. If we need to add user we will email him then he will do it. We want to add printer we need to contact him and he will configure it and we will be on the site to plug the printer for him while he configure everything remotely. So basically internal IT cannot even add printer in the network if we follow the consultants directive. lolz

                                So this is VERY different than your original post. This is a consultant thinking that they are replacing internal IT.

                                I think we are at the wrong stage here..... so why did management bring them in, what does management want them to be doing, why is the consultant involved in asking for levels of work, what is the role of IT supposed to be, who is in charge?

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                                  last edited by

                                  @Carnival-Boy said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                  But I don't expect an individual consultant to be a generalist.

                                  Why? If you don't expect that of internal IT, why expect it of consultants? Most consultants are generalists. The vast majority. Certainly not all, but definitely most. And almost all that do work for the SMB sector.

                                  C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @Minion Queen
                                    last edited by

                                    @Minion-Queen said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                    @AshKetchum said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                    @scottalanmiller he wanted to do everything. If we need to add user we will email him then he will do it. We want to add printer we need to contact him and he will configure it and we will be on the site to plug the printer for him while he configure everything remotely. So basically internal IT cannot even add printer in the network if we follow the consultants directive. lolz

                                    Wow he was trying to replace you. A business should always have control of how little or how much an external contractor does. Doesn't matter if it is IT or Accounting or the person who changes the light bulbs.

                                    Yeah, something is wrong here. It sounds like the consultant is in the position of manager and reports to no one? Why is management not stepping in?

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller @AshKetchum
                                      last edited by

                                      @AshKetchum said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                      @Carnival-Boy said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                      @c00l.ice said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                      Local IT Team is capable of doing the day to day operations and management needed for all of the below. Where should a consultant fit it?

                                      In our case, we're the local IT team capable of handling day to day operations. We're all generalists because we work for an SMB. We know a fair a bit about most things, but we're not experts. There are times when we need to bring in an expert, and that's where we employ consultants.

                                      It's like when I go and see my local doctor. Most of the time he can fix me. But there are times when he needs to send me to see a consultant at the hospital.

                                      But I don't expect an individual consultant to be a generalist. I expect them to be a specialist - expert in their field, but ignorant of most other fields. Just like heart specialist the hospital isn't going to fix my broken leg. So either engage with an IT company that employs a number of different specialists (an Exchange guy, a VMware guy) or I employ a number of different individual companies that focus on one thing.

                                      So basically, you contact a specialist consultant based on your requirements. That's better, because here the consultant contact the vendor so if we have issue with the firewall we need to pass the consultant first before contacting the vendor for firewall.

                                      So what it sounds like is that you have two IT departments. The consultants are the real ones, and you are shadow IT. Let's look at this from the other side. It sounds like, currently, the consultants are in charge. What is the role of internal IT, then? What are they to do?

                                      A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                                        last edited by

                                        @Breffni-Potter said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                        @AshKetchum said

                                        So basically, you contact a specialist consultant based on your requirements. That's better, because here the consultant contact the vendor so if we have issue with the firewall we need to pass the consultant first before contacting the vendor for firewall.

                                        That's not a consultant.

                                        That's a reseller pretending to be a consultant.

                                        It probably is a reseller running a scam, BUT there are non-resellers that do this. NTG does this, we talk to the vendors or VARs for the customers so that they get full stack management. Anything internal IT would do, we do. But we are not a reseller, nor is the internal IT a reseller. There are good reasons to have your MSP/ITSP do the vendor talks, but only if you trust that they are not a reseller in any way. And there shouldn't be two layers doing the same job, that's just insane.

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                                        • C
                                          Carnival Boy @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                          @Carnival-Boy said in IT Consultant / Manage Service Practices:

                                          But I don't expect an individual consultant to be a generalist.

                                          Why? If you don't expect that of internal IT, why expect it of consultants? Most consultants are generalists. The vast majority. Certainly not all, but definitely most. And almost all that do work for the SMB sector.

                                          Because we have generalists internally. What we don't have is specialists. Why would we employ a generalist consultant when we already have that internally?

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • A
                                            AshKetchum @scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by AshKetchum

                                            @scottalanmiller This is the history. The company is under a different consultant before, it gets soar and they decided to move on and get a new one.

                                            During that time the IT is very small so mostly are outsource and internal IT has limited function. The new consultant comes in and the company also expanded then the Internal IT doubled.

                                            Management wanted that Internal IT should be in charge of the Infrastructure with the assistance of the consultant. But the consultant / re-seller is giving this complications like doing basically everything on some of the basic functions that actually hinders internal IT to do their tasks. example printers, adding users, etc.

                                            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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