When Is It Okay to Say You Are a System Administrator
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@tirendir said in When Is It Okay to Say You Are a System Administrator:
@scottalanmiller Perhaps I could ask you this question: Because I am an SMB IT Admin, what might you suggest I do in our current configuration to maximize bang for the buck? Or would you rather a new thread be started to deal with that?
Sorry, been traveling. Finally at a computer again. New thread would be ideal. I'm sure we could make a huge discussion about that specific thing.
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@kelly said in When Is It Okay to Say You Are a System Administrator:
We've had this discussion before @scottalanmiller. You're fighting common usage, and you're not going to win. In SMB hiring a Systems Administrator is someone who is the equivalent of what you call an IT Admin. The problem is that common usage dictates that a SysAdmin > IT Admin (assuming the latter is even on the radar). So for an SMB job seeker to not use SysAdmin, because that is appropriate for the job being hired for even if it is not 100% technically accurate, is to automatically penalize themselves in that specific market.
I'm not sure which windmills you're trying to take down, but in the SMB market you're not going to make headway. These discussions devolve, and the only thing that happens is that job seekers like @wirestyle22 end up confused and discouraged. You're not wrong in the most accurate sense, but I don't know that you're helping.
In this case the SMB is fighting honest, common and obvious usage. I'm only pointing out the industry usage. If SMBs use this, they know that they are faking it, the admins know that they are faking it and hiring managers know that it was fake.
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@tirendir said in When Is It Okay to Say You Are a System Administrator:
@scottalanmiller The one comment I would put forth in response is that "success" has various meanings to various people. What I consider success, you consider success, and any other individual consider successful is unlikely to coincide past a point.
I've never found this to be true. While people might make it hard to write a definition of success, people generally agree on it when they see it.
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@tirendir said in When Is It Okay to Say You Are a System Administrator:
It's dumb to ask for advice or opinions and then ignore them entirely, I agree. However it's also impractical to assume that all things are equal either, as we know that's not true.
The difference is... learning from processes that regularly and reliably result in desired results vs. learning from processes that rarely, if ever, achieve desired results.
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@scottalanmiller You used the key phrase in your response: desired results. While great success is generally pretty widely agreed upon, specifics vary widely because desired results vary widely from individual to individual. It's difficult to argue that everyone desires the same results, when that doesn't bear out as the case on a regular basis in reality.
In spite of the fact that great success is pretty widely acknowledged as such by most, the bar for success varies very wildly all over the spectrum, to the point that many people even consider what you or I might consider a failure to be a modest success. It's really not so black and white as essentially that desired results = yours or my definition of success when desire is such a subjective term. Just because you or I want a certain level or type of success doesn't in any way mean that the level or type of success that everyone wants is remotely identical, even though there is some level of commonality present in all likelihood.
Some like myself have no interest in what most consider great success, because I know what I want and don't want out of life. What most people would consider great success doesn't interest me, because corporate ladders and large multiples of dollar signs are of little consequence in my mind. I only need as much money as I need to afford the lifestyle I'm content with. Anything more is unnecessary and unworthy of the investment required to pursue it to me. Not saying that what you do or have done isn't successful Scott, far from it. However, that doesn't mean that if you were to deem my choices as unsuccessful ones, that you would be correct any more than if I said you were unsuccessful because I disagreed with your definition since success is defined as: The accomplishment of an aim or purpose.
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@tirendir said in When Is It Okay to Say You Are a System Administrator:
In spite of the fact that great success is pretty widely acknowledged as such by most, the bar for success varies very wildly all over the spectrum, to the point that many people even consider what you or I might consider a failure to be a modest success.
I don't think of it as a bar, per se, but more about different values. You value location more than I do, for example, while I value money more than you.
However, I'd argue that with good "success" you can have more control over your location and your income and have less risk that you will lose control of that.
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@scottalanmiller You make a fair point, and I agree with your assessment that legitimate success should enable us to have more control over location and income with less risk of losing control over any of those things.
Really, we could probably boil "success" down to getting what we want out of life. More or less anyway, right?
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@tirendir said in When Is It Okay to Say You Are a System Administrator:
@scottalanmiller You make a fair point, and I agree with your assessment that legitimate success should enable us to have more control over location and income with less risk of losing control over any of those things.
Really, we could probably boil "success" down to getting what we want out of life. More or less anyway, right?
Or... the leverage to get what we want from life