Is Most IT Really Corrupt?
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
In that case - The IT department cares more about the IT aspect of the company, and since I'm not the decision maker, I can't say if IT cares about the company or not.
Can you define an "IT aspect of the company" because I can't. All of the company is equally an IT aspect. All IT decisions are based around "what is best for the bottom line". The entire company is equally an IT aspect. IT caring means caring about the business.
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@scottalanmiller said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
No I'm asking you to list what I call myself when I'm not a decision maker - and it looks like you call them the IT department.
You make zero decisions? You are literally nothing but remote hands for someone else?
The decisions I make are pretty minor in my mind - is this PC ready to be rebuilt? replaced? But otherwise, I only make recommendations - I think our 10 year old server should be replaced, the warranty costs more than a new server would, otherwise it's doing the job we need, etc.
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@scottalanmiller said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
No I'm asking you to list what I call myself when I'm not a decision maker - and it looks like you call them the IT department.
You make zero decisions? You are literally nothing but remote hands for someone else?
The decisions I make are pretty minor in my mind - is this PC ready to be rebuilt? replaced? But otherwise, I only make recommendations - I think our 10 year old server should be replaced, the warranty costs more than a new server would, otherwise it's doing the job we need, etc.
Does "minor" matter? I don't see how.
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
The decisions I make are pretty minor in my mind - is this PC ready to be rebuilt? replaced?
Take this example, no matter how minor, your decision is based purely around value to the organization. 100% business value to the business bottom line. Just because the decision is small or limited doesn't change that it is about the business and not about IT as some abstract non-business concept.
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
But otherwise, I only make recommendations - I think our 10 year old server should be replaced, the warranty costs more than a new server would, otherwise it's doing the job we need, etc.
And how do you make any recommendation without the context of it being made to aid the business?
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@scottalanmiller said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
But otherwise, I only make recommendations - I think our 10 year old server should be replaced, the warranty costs more than a new server would, otherwise it's doing the job we need, etc.
And how do you make any recommendation without the context of it being made to aid the business?
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
But in the things they do understand - I fully expect that they do what they consider best for the company. IT's role is limited in scope, the CEO/owners is the whole company.
I guess I'm missing what you're trying to say.
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@dashrender scope isn't a factor in caring. It's easy for IT to care more. All it takes is... caring more. IT tends to be more concerned with better decisions than owners are. Owners in the SMB are often distracted by emotional responses instead of focusing on the business.
How often do we see an owner get a recommendation made for the good of the business yet then do the exact opposite in spite of the business needs? All the time, to the point of it just being expected. That's caring more. One cared about the business, one cared about something else.
Does all IT care? Of course not, hence this thread. Is it totally common for IT to care more about the business than the owner? Yes, also very common.
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
I'm trying to find the name of the job that supports the technical stuff in a company without being a decision maker - because according to you, IT= the business, basically makes them a C level part of the company along with CEO and COO, etc. So what do you call the people in the trenches doing the work after the decisions are made?
Going from a typical oil/gas major 3 tier's of fun...
Architects make design decisions, engineers do the implementations, operations keep things... running.
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
Lifestyle businesses where they don't care about making money beyond xxx amount to maintain their lifestyle. Pretty common in SMB.
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@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
Lifestyle businesses where they don't care about making money beyond xxx amount to maintain their lifestyle. Pretty common in SMB.
Is there a problem with that type of thinking?
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
Lifestyle businesses where they don't care about making money beyond xxx amount to maintain their lifestyle. Pretty common in SMB.
Is there a problem with that type of thinking?
He's really just answering your question. How can IT care more about the business then the owner? If the owner only cares about maintaining their lifestyle then they obviously don't care much about the business outside of that context.
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@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
I'm trying to find the name of the job that supports the technical stuff in a company without being a decision maker - because according to you, IT= the business, basically makes them a C level part of the company along with CEO and COO, etc. So what do you call the people in the trenches doing the work after the decisions are made?
Going from a typical oil/gas major 3 tier's of fun...
Architects make design decisions, engineers do the implementations, operations keep things... running.
I spoke about that an MangoCon.
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@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
Lifestyle businesses where they don't care about making money beyond xxx amount to maintain their lifestyle. Pretty common in SMB.
What I called orbital businesses at MangoCon.
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@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
operations keep things... running.
Or breaks things themselves
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
Lifestyle businesses where they don't care about making money beyond xxx amount to maintain their lifestyle. Pretty common in SMB.
Is there a problem with that type of thinking?
Problem? No, not if they are the owners rather than fiduciaries. No one implied a problem. The point was that you asked how IT could care more and he was pointing out entire categories of businesses where IT often cares more.
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@scottalanmiller said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
Lifestyle businesses where they don't care about making money beyond xxx amount to maintain their lifestyle. Pretty common in SMB.
Is there a problem with that type of thinking?
Problem? No, not if they are the owners rather than fiduciaries. No one implied a problem. The point was that you asked how IT could care more and he was pointing out entire categories of businesses where IT often cares more.
Yeah - Coliver already beat you to that comment.
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@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@scottalanmiller said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@storageninja said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
@dashrender said in Is Most IT Really Corrupt?:
Then I'm lost how you say IT cares more about the business than the owner/CEO does? They don't know the IT side of things, so they more or less have to rely on others to help them, if they choose not to follow those recommendations is another matter.
Lifestyle businesses where they don't care about making money beyond xxx amount to maintain their lifestyle. Pretty common in SMB.
Is there a problem with that type of thinking?
Problem? No, not if they are the owners rather than fiduciaries. No one implied a problem. The point was that you asked how IT could care more and he was pointing out entire categories of businesses where IT often cares more.
Yeah - Coliver already beat you to that comment.
Sorry, just answer them as I go