I remember getting hired as entry level help desk for $20/h and worked at that company for 4 years... I did get a raise near the end that bumped me up to $22/h. By the 4th year, they hired a new guy who for some reason was comfortable enough to share his salary and it was $14/h and he had a computer science degree from a Cal State... My heart dropped because not only was it sad and unfair, it was also scary and downright disgusting. I left that job and got another one paying $30/h. Don't settle, always keep searching, you are valuable to someone out there. (guy still works for that company but I'm not sure if he ever got a raise).
@kimo3865 жыл бұрын
Are you self taught?
@gsabella45 жыл бұрын
You stayed at the same company for close to 4 years after they did not give you a single raise? wow.
@Berelore5 жыл бұрын
@@gsabella4 I don't know what's more troubling if he asked was denied and stayed anyway or if he just never asked...
@FM-cw8fx5 жыл бұрын
Never settle down. Keep always learning new things, getting certs.
@judsonjames335 жыл бұрын
One should never be afraid to share salary, it gives you leverage to ask for more money if you have the experience.
@jakejustchillin6 жыл бұрын
This really inspired me. I've been working at a computer repair shop for over a year where I'm the only technician on staff besides the owner and have been getting paid $11 an hour till about a month ago I'm now making a dollar more. I pretty much run the store I handle every customer, answer every phone, do every repair while I'm there. This convinced me it's time to start looking and that I'm worth more. Thank you
@Ramms236 жыл бұрын
Yes, you do. go for it. There are plenty of opportunities out there.
@Needcollegehelp6 жыл бұрын
Yeah once you gain skills increase your confidence level then time to look for better paying job go on Dice.com but keep learning in particular #cybersecurity. Good luck.
@xxN3CR0K1TTYxx6 жыл бұрын
I have no experience and they r starting me off at 19$ at an entry level it job
@xxN3CR0K1TTYxx6 жыл бұрын
Rudy Straight Los Angeles
@justwatchingvideosLA5 жыл бұрын
Put your resume on LinkedIn. When recruiters start offering you waaaay more money, you’ll get a better idea of the salary you can ask for.
@juliomontezuma234 жыл бұрын
I started in the IT field with no degree at 18.50 as a contractor in San Francisco. 2 months later I got another IT contractor role at $25. A year after that I got another IT role at $40 as a full time employee. Experience plus time and not giving up on searching for a better opportunity.
@Swat320974 жыл бұрын
what role is the $40?
@jakimmixon14612 жыл бұрын
@@Swat32097 service desk analyst or technician for a great company
@masoodjamily Жыл бұрын
You are absolutely correct and congratulations on your dedication which is really what counts. I know this video doesn’t represent every IT entry level but it is true. There are companies that will little bowl employees just because they need to save money right now I am working on my A+ certification and if I don’t make at least $55,000 a year I’m not even going to except any offers. I need to make at least what I’m making now otherwise there’s no point.
@erichaynes75026 жыл бұрын
Entry level is fine for a year or two..make yourself marketable, get another cert or two and move up.
@BatJeff5 жыл бұрын
This. going to be going back to school in January to get into IT and work my way to InfoSec. I plan on getting certs while I have that entry level job.
@kermitdafrog85 жыл бұрын
That's the name of the game. Don't settle and stay in the role. Use it to move up
@jaronmartin57585 жыл бұрын
Land a better role before getting certs otherwise your Money is down the drain. If companies cared about them they would support you and pay for them, ha not.
@kermitdafrog85 жыл бұрын
They seem to require them even though so many get them and still no nothing of the industry.
@jamoe48025 жыл бұрын
Entry level at what price? Market value is determined by us...THE MARKET! So don't work for $12/hour. Nobody with an A+ and a pulse should be taking a penny less than $15/hour and really it should be worth $18-$20/hour. There are retail stores and warehouses that pay more to people with ZERO skills or education. Do not let these companies low ball people and ask for the moon and the stars. We need work experience, and they need the work done.
@spamin8r5 жыл бұрын
I tell people all the time, in this industry if you want a raise, quit.
@stephenrochester63095 жыл бұрын
spamin8r Or learn, get sponsored certifications, learn some more, then hop to the next place.
@JJ-vp3bd5 жыл бұрын
@@stephenrochester6309 which ones?
@stephenrochester63095 жыл бұрын
R J Depends what you want to do. What do you want to do? When I was working in IT Support the company paid for me to do near enough anything I asked for.
@JJ-vp3bd5 жыл бұрын
@@stephenrochester6309 security
@stephenrochester63095 жыл бұрын
R J How about CISM certification?
@StephanieHua5 жыл бұрын
All IT newcomers... keep improving yourself. You have to get dirty to improve. I started at a computer repair store, got hired to learn IT help desk, then dispatch, escalations, and currently now implementation of projects such as Network Infrastructure. I am still on the lookout for better wages Keep getting those certs and be sure the companies you work for (at minimum) has a ticket system. If it’s just taking emails and calls with minimal documentation, learn as much as you can and get out. Nothing is worse than working for an "IT MSP" that doesn't document anything. Even more worse if they do not have a "Standard" to follow.
@i2pjd6hRw5P Жыл бұрын
I'm currently in a helpdesk-ish role at a company that doesn't use ticketing. It's very stressful, our team is pretty unorganized and we're never on the same page. Our workload is insane.
@jamesharazda50275 жыл бұрын
True story. Companies will call something "entry level" just because they don't want to pay what the job duties are worth elsewhere.
@joesawyer41505 жыл бұрын
I once saw a job ad for a first line role saying you need to configure vlans and networking lol.
@TheMazinoz4 жыл бұрын
And when you realise this you don't take the job or start looking for the next one while still employed. Tell new employer what your were doing in your role, not what it was called.
@Schminner4 жыл бұрын
Entry-level job title, but an expert-level job description.
@2amProFilms5 жыл бұрын
This is by far the most important video to watch for any newcomers into the IT field, this guys speaks the absolute truth that is NEVER told to you when going to school. I too got caught in this web of BS pay. Literally had the power to shutdown over 500+ customer locations with a single command in a cisco router, I was entrusted with an insane amount of privileges within this company however they felt I was only entitled to $15/hr as a CONTRACTOR (no benefits at all). I was new fresh out of college didn't know any better so I took this low pay entry level job because they told me I would be evaluated in 6 months for higher pay (that never happened). The silver lining with taking this low pay job was I get a SHIT ton of real world experience, I forced myself to work closely with network engineers and systems engineers to gain as much knowledge as I could within the company that more than paid for itself in the long run!
@bryang46592 жыл бұрын
2 1/2 years ago I got completely burnt out on Sales and switched to IT. No degree, just a lot of customer service experience and an adequate amount of computer knowledge, supplemented by good Google skills. I did Microsoft 365 support for a company that paid $17/hr never gave raises, and promotions just meant more responsibility no extra pay. Left them for a Managed Services Provider that payed $19/hr and after a year got bumped up to $20/hr. Both jobs didn't pay well but I got experience, and just accepted a new position as a System Administrator for $74,000/YR. Help desk jobs may not pay that well, but you are getting the experience to help you land the good jobs.
@toneallday5468 Жыл бұрын
Now this right here is what I want to see. So you git that sys admin job with no certification, just experience?
@bryang4659 Жыл бұрын
@@toneallday5468 the only certification was Google IT Support Professional which I got through Coursera in about a month, and I do not think it was a deciding factor other than maybe showing I was willing to keep learning
@CurtisBranum-IT5 жыл бұрын
I found a level one help desk position with no IT experience and it’s almost 20 an hour. Just keep looking guys
@rosswhitlock30255 жыл бұрын
Ty
@frosty93925 жыл бұрын
.. you guys hiring? lol
@MegaThatonegirl5 жыл бұрын
What was the company?
@Randomguy-kn3nv5 жыл бұрын
Yo hook it up
@thenson1Halo4 жыл бұрын
But in what State/area?
@howlingfjord1066 жыл бұрын
Glad you made this video! I just came into an entry level position at 17/hr and the amount of stuff and number of staff they have us supporting is mind-boggling. For the entire first two months I felt like quitting at every step because the workload was so intense and learning-curve was almost vertical. But I kept reminding myself that every time they threw me into a brand new technology and told me to support it, it was going to be one more thing I could add to my resume. Now it's becoming a little more easy and I have a giant boat-load of experience that I feel helps me converse with people as an actual IT professional instead of just a good exam-taker. It can be super tough and intimidating starting your first enterprise IT role but the things you learn will make you instantly more valuable as a potential employee.
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
Absolutely!! Best way to look at those situations!
@MySqueezingArm6 жыл бұрын
I'm 2 months in on my first help desk gig. Took me 6 months and 1 failed job (psycho owners) to get it. Making $4/hour more than my last gig, great atmosphere, love it. Im a 26 year old college dropout, living proof that hard work and some certs can get your foot in the door. Love this video Zack, more please.
@FG2Zim5 жыл бұрын
Hey what certifications did you get to get your foot in the door?
@AP-jz1bx3 жыл бұрын
@@FG2Zim A+ is a good start.
@teetee26406 жыл бұрын
Ladies and gentlemen, know your worth!!! Strive to be smarter. Get your certifications.
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
Always know your worth!
@markstevens11875 жыл бұрын
Not so much certifications I fell having good knowledge and hands experience on will speak better value for you.
@phpacos125 жыл бұрын
@@markstevens1187 better yet is to get a portifólio. If you can show that you created a website or an application and there are people using it, that can be more valuable than a certification or a diploma. So don't get stuck on tutorial purgatory and start working on your own projects.
@octaviusthird67265 жыл бұрын
I generally took the lower paid jobs if they gave me the skills that I really need to find a much better job in a year.
@abhisekraj27653 жыл бұрын
YES
@revanknight32023 жыл бұрын
You are smart.
@noname896366 жыл бұрын
Say it louder for the people in the back. These companies will give you an entry level title, make you do higher level work, but pay you for the entry level title. Titles matter when it comes to pay and companies are going to be cheap about it. They know that a dual sys/network admin should net 50-60K as a gross average, but will give you the title of Help Desk II or IT Specialist I and pay you 36K. They expect you to be the IT superhero, but will not pay you for it. Continue to preach it brotha.
@PMPerformance5 жыл бұрын
I seen a Sys Admin position once posted as a $17K/yr job. I almost died when i saw that
@markstevens11875 жыл бұрын
@@PMPerformance yeah I see listing like that for example they want CCNP level experience and knowledge but want to pay nothing. The IT pay is still too low due to all the foreign workers willing to work for nothing this is what keep all levels of IT positions unacceptably low.
@PMPerformance5 жыл бұрын
@@markstevens1187 I agree. Its tough. I have gotten pretty lucky thus far, but I would be frustrated looking for jobs seeing that kind of thing. I am sure places get to a point where they realize they get what they pay for and start wising up.
@DerrickWe5 жыл бұрын
A job like that should be paying north of 75k just for the sys admin side.
@PMPerformance5 жыл бұрын
Derrick Weil agreed! I tell this to the unfortunate people that work with me and getting beat up on salary by my employer. I remind them regularly they are worth more and to negotiate more or look for someone that will pay them for all the extra stuff they do. You deff have to stick up for yourself
@ag11b696 жыл бұрын
I just graduated with a degree in IT and am currently in the market for my first IT job. You addressed an issue I have been seeing with these job postings. I've routinely come across a "PC technician" job posting only to click on it and find that they're looking for an IT God with every certification under the sun. Oh, and for 15 to 16 bucks and hour. So as a rookie in the field of IT, how does one navigate these toxic employers to find that one job that will actually be worth it?
@Sunokanse6 жыл бұрын
After working 5 years at a low level help desk (my fault), and then leaving it, the highest offer for other help desk positions I was getting was $18/hr. Your best bet would be to know a bit of active directory for password resets and unlocks, having an A+ might help, and canvassing the market with your resume. Even if they are looking for a god, they might call you if that god can't be found. Be confident, and always believe that if they don't hire you, it's their loss. You'll eventually land something. Always remember, if you're no longer learning in a position and you've maxed out, it's time to go.
@addacdd6 жыл бұрын
I know how you feel but bro anywhere is a good start. Trust me lucky to even get 18 an hr and in my area it shluld be $24-30. Experience is key
@ag11b696 жыл бұрын
@@addacdd I have an offer on the table to be a system admin for a local credit union paying 23 an hour. Unfortunately I live in CA and cant afford to live there even making that much. So I'm gonna move to AZ but most job postings I've seen In Arizona fit what the video is talking about. I'll stick with it though.
@addacdd6 жыл бұрын
@@ag11b69 do what you can, the exodus is real sadly. But i grew up in the Bay so i wanna stay out here. But hell if i made $24 starting id be happy. But everyone os differe t. Best of luck
@ag11b696 жыл бұрын
@@addacdd I grew up in socal and hate to leave but it's the sad reality man. Cant afford a $750k house in my neighborhood.
@bannerboygamez34856 жыл бұрын
So true when it comes to IT, I'm a Desktop Support tech for the school district with 6 schools and when I started I was officially hired only to support 2 and compensated for those 2. Now I got 6 and still being compensated the same money as if I still had 2. Use them for enough experience and move on to next company is my advice. After the holidays is over I'm going to bounce
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
Good luck! That experience is going to help you tremendously!
@owlfeathers66155 жыл бұрын
Did you bounce? How are things going now?
@altaccount87495 жыл бұрын
Did you bring this up in yearly evaluations?
@zachicusmaximus55515 жыл бұрын
Yeah and I bet they utilize your above and beyond knowledge to artificially increase your job responsibilities as well without paying more.
@addacdd6 жыл бұрын
You hit the head on the nail, this is my 3rd week as a Help Desk and I enjoy it a lot. The only part im getting used to is teouble shooting. Its like an art, im not shot gunning it tho. I do my best to critically think before doing anything and ask for help because I want to learn for myself. I dont expect to be a cyber analyst right away or engineer. I come from the medical field and everything builds on top of each other especially... especially customer service #1. I enjoy your videos man. Keep it up!
@cu8066 жыл бұрын
Yep guess I'll have to start off and at help desk too
@addacdd6 жыл бұрын
@@cu806 its the onlh place to start man, the sooner the better
@cu8066 жыл бұрын
@@ChefRon1 man I work in an aspect of IT mainly dealing with printers,but as far as like a networking or security job I haven't been able to get a job that can compensate my current wage and benefits,BUT I have been enjoying learning about the aspects of IT. I really think it boils down to the company you work for.
@cu8066 жыл бұрын
@@ChefRon1 I'm still avoiding the service desk rules for now unless it's at a major company.
@ionblue27076 жыл бұрын
3rd month in first IT role in the medical field as a help desk tech. We run our applications through Citrix, so lots of session resets. Im liking it alot so far. Troubleshooting is tough due to the fact a lot of the issues are phone/faxing/EMR software, which i have little to no experience with at the moment, but getting better at it (session resets/reboots fixes most issues). Already started getting into SQL and running simple queries in our production database and deploy systems. Thankful for the experience and opportunities. The worst thing i've come to realize is that IT is a thankless job.
@Re_Mecs5 жыл бұрын
Great video. I spent a good 6 years slowly climbing help desk roles and salaries. Was made redundant and now due to that experience now work as an administrator for a larger company with a lot more pay and so much more job satisfaction. There is light at the end of the tunnel
@exmerion5 жыл бұрын
It's honestly good that there are entry level jobs out there that provide high turn over jobs because those jobs can actually be essential to get your foot into the door of IT. The more positions opening up allows more people to get the experience they need to leave and move up to a better position. Just looking on the bright side.
@thulyover90005 жыл бұрын
Computer techs really ought to unionize.
@Charrua884 жыл бұрын
Why this doesn't has more likes?
@ActualZombeard4 жыл бұрын
@@Charrua88 that's what I'm wondering.
@heswatchnu4 жыл бұрын
I have been in a union when i workd at helpdesk for the big T, and i now work at a company that is not unionized, same role...i see no benefit of being in the union environment. That's just me... I was also a union steward. honestly, more people were fired in the union environment; it seems people have the idea that the union will "fight" to keep their job regardless of how they perform, etc. Additionally, in the first company, the union was part of opening the call center and establishing the starting pay - which was a joke. they labeled the role mas customer service, instead of technical support. That seems to be the theme for the rate of pay, it is on the same level as customer service reps. I don't like it either, it's just the big corporate wheel - get on or get rolled on...
@LimewaterMusic4 жыл бұрын
@@heswatchnu unions today are broken and weak and cannot be expected to pull any weight. The problem is simply not enough people involved, it’s gotta be everyone or it won’t be able to do anything.
@jleslie13373 жыл бұрын
This would be how all Americans lose their entry level it jobs
@bluebladex35 жыл бұрын
The low pay rate happened to me. I got contracted by a contract company filling Helpdesk roles for another company and months in I realized I was being paid at most 5 bucks less than the other people there who were working on full time with the main company with benefits and holidays off while us contractors had to work their holidays while being paid 5 bucks less. I was making 10 bucks while everyone was making 15-16. I mean it was an easy job don't get me wrong like 8 calls tops a day but hey man got paid way less and I knew more than most people there. Managed to get a new one because of experience and getting some certs and yes I did double my salary like you said after just 7 months of work at my old job. I'm aiming though to be a some kind of server tech for a big bank or company working night shift. An IT night shift job with not having to fix some idiots shoddy software that is running trash is my dream job. Tired of help desk calls. Rather work alone chilling managing networks or servers. Most important part is night shift. I'd kill for a night shift IT job. Spend most the night alone and only would have to deal with people 2 hours tops in the morning.
@sakenaabdulhaqq14 жыл бұрын
bluebladex3 introverts dream
@jb61675 жыл бұрын
Don't let them rip you off. ALWAYS negotiate for more salary. NEVER take the first offer. You are worth every penny.
@DisappointedSon08133 жыл бұрын
Cannot negotiate if they don’t let you. If they hold firm at a low ball salary then you’re fucked
@AMAli-ct5df3 жыл бұрын
Man, No first offers the golden rule of working as an Help desk
@dandavidson90305 жыл бұрын
You said a mouthful. I have been in IT for many years. IT used to be appreciated more. A lot of companies take IT for granted. After you get a little experience. Go to a large company. They will pay much more. Excellent video.
@BruceRichwineJr5 жыл бұрын
This video was spot on. He’s absolutely truthful about doubling your salary overnight. Certifications in certain areas can actually triple your salary if coming from an entry level position. Look into government contracting companies. They seem to pay better than the private sector for entry level also and usually have an opportunity to move up to Tech level 1-4.
@yourstrulyjohnnydollar87755 жыл бұрын
Wow, I sure feel lucky for how my first two years in IT have been. I came to IT in my mid thirties after have a miserable time trying to find employment as a librarian. I got an Associates from a community college in two years and they also got me an internship at the company now work for. I was paid $14 an hour as an intern, but was immedietly put to work on small changes to SQL stored procs. Within 9 months I was hired on as a full associate and making $27 an hour. Now I have been there almost two years and I have been told I should expect in the next few months a promotion and a raise that should be around 7 or 8K . And I don't feel like I am even that knowledgable about many of the things work on...
@zlIWCARIlz5 жыл бұрын
My story so far is very similar to yours. Did law enforcement in the military for 6 years, got out and started school at a community college. Got hired on as a paid intern with this tech company halfway through my associates degree at $15/hr which is perfectly fine because I need my foot in the door and the experience. Its been a great experience so far but if nothing progresses by the time I graduate, I'll look elsewhere.
@TheMazinoz4 жыл бұрын
But do they know that?
@Lavish17173 жыл бұрын
@@zlIWCARIlz What did you earn your associates degree in ?
@zlIWCARIlz3 жыл бұрын
@@Lavish1717 cyber security
@amrg2115 жыл бұрын
Wow brother you nailed this conversation. I have been working in help desk for almost 4 years now and pretty much everything you said was spot on correct. And the company I work for is a tech company no less. But like you said the experience i have gained has been invaluable to me. I'm at the point where I am ready to move on to something bigger and better paying now. I don't look back with regret because I learned a lot but I wish I had avoided the traps you described and got out sooner. Thank you for the upload.
@Itcareerquestions5 жыл бұрын
Absolutely! Glad you're moving on now! Good luck to you in your future!
@Bierz8085 жыл бұрын
6 years in and I am now an official network administrator! Keep your head straight, fix shit the way it should be fixed, and never stop learning!! And I mean learn something every single day, if you don't, you are failing. Any new techs reading this, always remember that there is never only 1 way to do something! If anyone tries to tech you that, they are in fact wrong. Do everything that works best for you. And always remember to keep searching for the proper IT job for YOU! That will keep you happy everyday. I still love my job and especially working in IT! He is right about doubling your salary as well! From one week to the next, I jumped almost $21k annually just finding a new job. Just don't sell yourself short, ever! You got this.
@the5thdim7633 жыл бұрын
Wow, that’s amazing. Where do you live??
@johnnybravo59625 жыл бұрын
My entry level out of college was a SOC Analyst, was also working Incidents to remediation. I got lucky.
@nf43226 жыл бұрын
Currently work for a cyber company who contracted me out to work IT and help desk. Current role is lead apps support specialist..15$ an hour and it’s a lot of work. The only bright side is, I haven’t graduated with my cyber security degree yet so this is some seriously good experience. I definitely think a couple years working here with my degree (bachelors in cyber security concentrated in network forensics) and some certs I can get a top notch cyber security job. That’s the goal at least..
@amandal.14225 жыл бұрын
U definitely can!! Employers look for experience so use that company now to gain experience and when u feel its time to spread ur wings and move up u have ur degree and that VALUED EXPERIENCE that'll help get u to ur goal! Id also like to get into Cybersecurity. Good luck!
@Berelore5 жыл бұрын
Yup, your degree will be next to useless, so get as much XP and as many certs as possible.
@telnet-234 жыл бұрын
A reality you also have to accept in IT is it costs money to make money. If you spend a couple hundred on a certification in your field you instantly become more marketable. My advise (and it worked for me) is get that entry level role and treat it like an apprenticeship. By the end of 2-3 years you will have a lot of experience and hopefully a few certs to show for it 😊
@hikikomori69562 жыл бұрын
Not the norm, but If you're lucky, some companies even foot the bill for your certification due to various reasons (need to have their staff be "up to a standard", higher ups wanting to meet some arbitrary certification target, etc).
@maxpendley43575 жыл бұрын
Entry level roles now: Seniority level: Entry level Education: Bachelors required. Certs preferred Experience: 5+ years supporting technology in enterprise environment Salary range: $35000-45000 deepening on credentials
@Randomguy-kn3nv5 жыл бұрын
Max Pendley it’s a fuckin joke dude
@supersaiyanbuu4 жыл бұрын
shit man i've got a bachelors and would prefer that over working shit retail
@user-tg3jl1mt4e4 жыл бұрын
@@supersaiyanbuu Yeah, like the dude said in the video it's all about increasing your value by learning more and getting experience. Even if the pay is barely more than minimum wage it will help you get a far better job in a year or two, or even less if you really push hard.
@heswatchnu4 жыл бұрын
Supply and demand. The more people that seek IT roles the greater the supply; thus companies realize that they can offer a role to a newbie who realllly wants to "get into computers" and is willing to take a lower wage. Multiply the process by several years - more and more people are turning to technology jobs vs. other more physical labor or retail, etc. so companies are offering less and less...until they realize that the demands they make along with the lower pay...the damage a disgruntled employee can cause..hee hee hee. maybe then they will add more value. The company I am with (a big cable internet company) finally realized how much $$ they lose when people leave...they changed a little bit, but not enough...I am seeking a new role. I'm just not in an area where tech is high demand...
@emilyau80233 жыл бұрын
Exactly, how am I supposed to get 3-5 years of experience when I'm applying for experience 🤦♀️
@gerryo254 жыл бұрын
I started a "entry level security analyst" position almost three years ago and took a pay cut because I wanted to get my foot in the first. After a year I negotiated a substantial raise and did the following year. These staffing agencies try to get you in as low as possible. There is no entry level cybersecurity job! You have to have prior IT experience to understand what your doing. I have 15 years of experience and started at 20 being a computer operator through sys admin. Know your worth these companies want you to do the job of three people and pay next to nothing. If I invest in myself and study for my certs out of my pocket I should take a poor salary. Nope!
@pugantrips61913 жыл бұрын
Fuck! got me in the gut, I've neglected my blooming IT career because of exactly this shit!! now I'm starting out from zero.. and I'm 42. and considering getting back in the field. hope it is not too late.
@badge22045 жыл бұрын
Man! I am working in Shanghai China, I was helpdesk for 3 years and now I am working as virtualization engineer. What u said is true, u make me recall my memories, u put me in tears. Me Not even closed to 9$/H. And I was handling countless cases. That job is toxic, it is absolutely true, but in China it is even more toxic, because helpdesk here has little chance to switch to another higher level job. I made it because I can speak English. Not because I had three years of helpdesk experience.
@slevinhyde3212 Жыл бұрын
Nice video, it brings me to the idea that as a job seeker I can ask to the recruiter how they estimate the value of the IT department.
@chriswest10436 жыл бұрын
I actualy had an interview where the hiring company kinda balked at me for the salary I was looking for as an entry level Sys Admin. They tried to claim that the salary I was looking for was for someone who had been in the role for over 5 years. Didn't get offered the position most likely due to that. Know your worth, and have the skills that correlate with what you are asking. I have not gone through studying for years just to be told I am not good enough.
@user-zu1ix3yq2w5 жыл бұрын
I like your perspective.. Thinking all that diligent and earnest studying and graduating at the top of your/my class has worth.
@user-zu1ix3yq2w5 жыл бұрын
Also, don't care that this comment is 1 year old. That's like, maybe a ten cent raise.
@HolyScript.5 жыл бұрын
Exactly. Years and student loans only to be making pennies.
@izamalcadosa2951 Жыл бұрын
I got out of Help Desk after starting and ending in it after 3 or 3 1/2 years! Too much bullshit involved in Tier 1 Help Desk or Desktop Support!
@SharronV Жыл бұрын
That was the worst job in my life! I hated it with everything in me.
@jaemelo26935 жыл бұрын
I can relate so much to this video. From the long diverse list of roles/scope creep to the garbage pay which basically reinforces the stereotype of organizations having low value in business units that do not directly generate revenue. I am Location Support for a global company w/ over 60,000 employees doing help desk shenanigans, SCCM OS deployments, Azure AD/Intunes for MDM, Cisco VOIP CCM/UC; however I unintentionally had my pay nearly doubled while still being in a "helpdesk role" from taking a few bible scriptures seriously. In a nutshell I was making $42k a year for a local consulting firm which is peanuts when the place you call home is #2 on the lists of places with the highest cost of living (Bermuda). After 3 years of receiving that salary I mentioned to one of the HR colleagues for the client I was outsourced to that I'll be leaving soon because of the salary was preventing me from getting a place & eventually marrying. Little did I know leaving wasn't an option or at least not without a counter offer. Apparently a few VIP's in the company didn't want me to exit so eventually I was poached from the contracting firm. For a company to risk going to court over poaching a "easily replaceable" Support Specialist says a lot. In return I was offered $70k to do the exact same job with 2-5% yearly salary increase. The trick to this all lied in the words my fiancee told me... "if you love someone you'll put their interest/needs before your own." I went into this job trying to love everyone. I applied this at the job for the 3 years as a contractor and ultimately it resulted in the offer... Coming in early, working late without logging OT, sacrificing lunch breaks to keep people happy, forgiving and forgetting always, while doing it with a smile/humility regardless of how toxic/unthankful the user was. This I think is the reason people liked me so much within the company on top of the proficiency. This is why I think I was given that salary. 1 Corinthians 10:24 "Let no one seek his own good, but the good of his neighbor." Philippians 2:4 "Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others."
@getfragged70512 жыл бұрын
I was like this and I just got taken advantage of and used by my employer until they forked the business into the dirt
@jaemelo26932 жыл бұрын
@@getfragged7051 crazy that you mentioned this.. I can relate and singing another tune now. The worklife balance has been trash since the start of the pandemic and now that it’s over here somehow those working conditions are still in effect. The employer has bumped my pay to 93k but I’m already looking… this pay sucks when PTO for the past two years has been just over 3weeks 😑
@HestnetIT5 жыл бұрын
I wasn’t a fan of your videos before as a helpdesk tech, your video has inspired me to keep pushing forward.
@warpdrivefueledbyinsomnia81656 жыл бұрын
There's a few possible outcomes for this problem: It could go the way of old factory labor. Overskilled, low-payed employees finally get sick of getting scraps of money for wages and decide to organize unions. That scenario has a whole list of other issues that I'm not going to get into, but I will say that it is one way to get wages up at least in the short term. Secondly, it could go the way of physical security. Persistent low wages in the field leads to a lower quality of employee coming in because promising potential IT employees begin looking to other fields. Eventually, a public perception of "the dumb IT guy" begins to build (like how the movies "Paul Blart" and "Observe and Report" played on the existing security guard stereotype) and low achievers begin to view IT as an industry that they can go in and just exist and breathe air for a paycheck. That begins a vicious downward spiral of IT skilled workers, leading eventually to IT staff being regarded about the same as other low-skill, low-wage jobs. Thirdly, and seemingly least likely, an understanding of the IT field begins to cultivate among top executives. This would require a non-tech oriented company (think like Coca-Cola or Nike shoes) making a conscious investment in their IT departments and realizing some sort of tangible gain from it over their competitors because of it. High level business has a lot of "follow the leader" that occurs, so that could be another way that change takes place. Lastly, this awkward dance could just continue on, where you have artificially deflated wages due to industry leadership not knowing or caring about what they have in their IT departments. Meanwhile, you still have an influx of skilled workers coming in who are inexplicably content with accepting low base wages on the promise that they will find a better, more career oriented position in 2-5 years. I would think that something would eventually give and one of the three above scenarios plays out, but change is scary and perhaps the industry stays comfortable with viewing low-paying entry level IT work as a gatekeeper. Who knows? Humans are weird like that.
@ace-x6m5 жыл бұрын
Unions are no better. TRUST ME.
@baisakhibhattacharyabb484 Жыл бұрын
I have tears in my eyes while watching this. I work in a healthcare centre as an entry level IT support technician in Australia, and here they don't give any value or respect to the IT department. There are only 2 people in our team, including me. The company actually didn't have a section called 'IT' before we joined. Some of the staff treat us like shit, use sarcasm to mock us. The owner of the company doesn't like us for some reason, and constantly irritates us bringing silly issues, such as "how to attach a file in gmail", " how to export my whatsapp chat to gmail", "how to turn on the speaker" etc, when we are focusing on something important. If we face any conflict with other teams, the owner openly favours the other teams, even if it's their fault, especially if they are clinicians or nurses or other healthcare professionals. Actually the owner's wife is a dotor. Both he and his wife have no idea what we do, how much effort it takes to organise such a scattered environment with little to no documentation. They want a stable, super fast, hi-tech environment, but are not willing to spend the money required for it. We have to tolerate insult from time to time, whenever we seek WFH or ask for taking a leave. There hasn't been a day when I didn't curse myself for studying IT and working in a company like this. Peoole, who are looking for career options, or switching career, please listen to my humble advise, don't come to the IT sector.
@benjaminhalder7868 Жыл бұрын
You are entirely awesome trust me. Some people are really shi**y towards the IT team. So I hope this gets to you 🙂
@partyglobe83763 жыл бұрын
As an IT Help Desk. I will warn you. This job is not good for your health. Chances of you having mental illness are high due the customers asking stupid questions. And consistent calls with no mercy. Its very stressful. Never overwork yourself because help desk is a dead end(if you plan on moving on) Never stress yourself. Go for system admin instead, its way less stressful.
@travisnelson91042 жыл бұрын
Questions aren't stupid to them though remember that. I think it's more to to do with the pressure. We are the front line essential workers
@thundercat07 Жыл бұрын
If you’re getting upset over repetitive questions, you’re in the wrong line of work and aren’t cut out for it. “Stupid repetitive questions” = job security
@partyglobe8376 Жыл бұрын
@@thundercat07 well ofc I was in the wrong line of work because I needed it to work my way up. Started as Help desk, System admin, now cyber defense which barely involves speaking with customers.
@alexycox13474 жыл бұрын
Zach nailed this one right on head! Specially about companies not putting value $$$ on their IT departments. Personally, after a long job search, I would suggest to look for an IT entry level job with a company that focuses on technology. I was fortunate to land a well paid entry level job with Red Hat. This is one example of a company that really values their IT department. All of our higher management understands the value of IT support, since the company itself sells customer support for technology.
@yukidejesus19565 жыл бұрын
im going in my 6th year IT career. Started as non paid from there, IT Assistant intern, IT lvl 0 (mostly setting up hardware), IT Helpdesk for 3 years. I knew I wasnt going no where with it..i tweaked my resume with name title change. Now im IT Admin. responsible for backend/front end stuff. Get all the experience you can get. Also working for the City, Google 3rd party vendor, Law firm and Tech companies help in your resume for sure. Im with a Hedge Fund now, the pay is much greater and benefits are way better than Google FT Employees. :P I dont miss working for tech companies..after awhile..theyre just a joke now. Good luck to all.
@Lavish17173 жыл бұрын
May I ask what you tweaked the name title change to ?
@BradleyCTurner3 жыл бұрын
@@Lavish1717 probably IT god.
@bluehen323 жыл бұрын
If you are giving accurate information you should never apologize. Thank you for the tips, I look forward to getting into the IT field.
@8novaavon8716 жыл бұрын
Not upset. But totally inspiring. I was an editor for a local news station making 11.50hr. but they wouldn't give me anywhere near 40hrs! After taxes, it added to around 7.50hr. I don't hate the news or my job at the time, but what i hated was dealing with all the politics and bs on a daily basis getting stressed out to my core, and still barely being able to pay my rent! All the pressure and the stress, and when I came to them asking for more hours at the very least, they told me that I should just get a part time job. Sure. Just sleep only 4 hours each day continuously stressed with no real confirmation that this job was going anywhere. But it wasn't just me, everyone was getting underpaid and being told it was okay and that "it's just how it goes." DON'T WORK FOR ANYTHING LESS THAN YOUR WORTH. I wasn't perfect at my job, but I tried on a daily basis. In the end I eventually hated doing what I loved, and it turned me into a toxic person. Keep doing what you love, but prove yourself with the experience that you gain, and go for bigger and better things. I believe in you!
@bdlamini90025 жыл бұрын
My advice? Take the job for experience....
@arifali67624 жыл бұрын
and move on.
@lonewolfstrife36374 жыл бұрын
Even if you know nothing, and only know how to turn on a computer and do basic stuff??
@bdlamini90024 жыл бұрын
@@lonewolfstrife3637 obviously not, training first and a beginners certifications help.... But I mean if you have training but no actual experience
@12012channel6 жыл бұрын
So, that I.T. job posting I saw a few years back that required multiple comptia certs and Bachelor's degree that payed around $10.00 an hour was real? At the time minimum wage was around $9.00.Thought it was a typo.
@jimmytwotime68754 жыл бұрын
They were probably hoping to outsource it to India.
@TheMazinoz4 жыл бұрын
@@jimmytwotime6875 Yes, but even they may not want it these days.
@doggydude41235 жыл бұрын
I don't work in IT, I'm an Civil Engineer, and I've literally found jobs that were less skilled that pays more. It reach a point where the most difficult part is actually getting the job. Pay disparity is huge in my field and like many have commented, job titles do matter. I had a technician that did the same job as me and when he sent out his near identical resume to same employers I did, only I would receive a response. Never stop learning and never stop advancing. Don't let them take advantage of you guys. They don't deserve your loyalty if they aren't willing to pay for it. They must realize the truth. "You shape others' behavior when you teach them what they can get away with and what they cannot." -Dr. Phil
@Sass2695 жыл бұрын
I work tech support now and I dislike it a lot. I can't wait to move on.
@pinglocalhost4 жыл бұрын
Get 1,2 years XP move on don't get stuck in the IT helpdesk loop. Where people call you up for only helpdesk roles. So easy to take them. Keep growing that brain 🧠 💪 and cert up .
@ShowMeMo5 жыл бұрын
I used to be in revenue cycle management in healthcare. Applied for another similar position but they offered me a Tier Ii Tech Support for one of their softwares. I have zero tech education or experience (much less a college degree) but they said they'll train me. I started making just under what the position pay range starts out at. But it's so much more than what I was making in revenue cycle management. I took it because of that and the fact they are paying me to teach me tech skills that will eventually pay me even more money. At middle age, it's a challenge but I enjoy it. The hardest part isn't knowing the fix, but getting the answer to the fix. I am only 3.5 months in and it's literally a drop in the bucket. But my coworkers said it's a steep learning curve, up to a year.
@chrisodwyerdosser6 жыл бұрын
I just want to say thanks for this video this has opened my mind up today to Self Worth. Today I had an interview with a multi national company as a Desktop support engineer where you would be working on a 8hr shift with one other engineer looking after the whole companies IT from remote and desk side support services to end users to Performing coordination of workstation asset recovery. The first offer was 12.50hr the second was 13.22hr. I turned them down I am now going to finish off my Network+ and Security+ instead
@joeo0o0o2 жыл бұрын
probably one of the best vids this guy has posted. Because I’m going through this crucible of low paying IT work. And it sucks!!!
@balzich145 жыл бұрын
Got my first job in IT back in October last year. Although my title is Help Desk Technician (coworker's title is Information Systems Analyst, which is tier 2) I do pretty advanced work for tier 1 support. I'm already working in our SQL production database and performing queries, just started learning about/working on our Avaya IP500 phone server, software deployments via PDQ, AD account creation/termination, UPS maintenance, patching ports, deploy new systems, configure IP addresses, and so on. I got started on $16.39/hour and just got another raise to $17.39/hr after the first 6 months. Not bad at all for entry level. I'm very grateful for the opportunity and it took me a couple years of searching to get a foot in the door.
@izamalcadosa2951 Жыл бұрын
You are doing Tier 2 and Tier 3 support, not Tier 1, my friend!
@warriorfire81036 жыл бұрын
5:30 Took the words right out of my mouth. I was lucky enough to be present and witness a business owner (our boss) get punked by an older experienced Network admin. People run their mouth when stressed but today bossman picked the wrong time to vent and take out his frustration and after that day, it never happened again. For those who don't get the hint. The moment the head admin leaves, the business goes under since no one knows how to fix or run anything. As hungry and patient(its pretty much a job requirement) as some IT companies are, they'll wash their hands of you if you push it or waste their time.
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
I've been in a position like that before.
@warriorfire81036 жыл бұрын
@@trustthe_process4371 sorry I wrote that in a hurry. Basically, don't screw with the people keeping you running.
@SavageScientist5 жыл бұрын
When i worked the helpdesk i was on contract with Dell in 2006 getting 8.50/hour in Mississippi. Turn over was high
@dyingbreed53865 жыл бұрын
I took a pay cut from washing dishes when I got my first IT job, lol. Within a year I doubled my pay and now I'm a Network Administrator making decent money with plenty of room to grow so it was worth it in my case. The key is don't be afraid to look elsewhere if you feel your company doesn't appreciate you.
@TheYodaman225 жыл бұрын
Every industry is the same, entry level rolls are to learn, combine it with studying a formal qualification and once you get it ask for a raise or find a place that’ll pay you.
@KDRoby3 жыл бұрын
Got my first IT job at $16. Glad to have your channel and that I did my research.
@zmoo37883 жыл бұрын
Hey, thats how much I get paid, this is also technically my first IT job (had a short unpaid internship). I do so much for my company and definitely deserve more... Ive fixed things my boss couldnt have. If youre only answering phone calls for simple application support or have barely any responsibilities, leave asap. The more you learn, the better. If youre actually learning things, stay there for 8-14 months Id recommend before looking for a new job that pays better... Any update on the job after 4 weeks?
@victorsencion36215 жыл бұрын
This is insane! Dunks pays 13 dollars an hour just to make coffee! This is depressing at best smh. Btw, thanks for the video, I'm sure it'll help a lot of people.
@mikebrar78003 жыл бұрын
the coffee makers add revenue!
@tomatobaby68273 жыл бұрын
A positive spin. The good thing about super low paying garbage IT jobs with high turn around is that if you have no experience, it makes it easier to get in. Think of it as a paid internship or going to school. Imagine you are desperate to get started, you would do it for free or even pay them for this kind of valuable experience, but instead, they are paying you. I started at the worst call center ticket mill job where you eat crap every day and smile and the pay was a joke. One and a half years later, I applied at a new job with this experience and now get paid a ton of dough.
@soulflytothemosthigh5 жыл бұрын
I was working 2 jobs from 1998 to 2003. Full time at National TechTeam (got hired by EDS 8 months later) in Michigan and part time on call for a company that did pickups for coroners and funeral homes in Ontario. EDS pulled the helpdesk out of Michigan so I did the pickups full time for a few more years. I got back in to I.T. at Sutherland in Ontario in 2006 which didn't pay a lot. 5 years later, I took a full time position in a funeral home due to still having low pay in I.T. I should have went back to I.T. in Michigan. The job as become too much for me to deal with. I am now doing CompTIA A+ online course from Mike Meyers and purchased the book. I will get certified and look for work and find a job in Michigan again. I WILL. Due to being out so long, this certification will be my only way back in. Then I will work on more certifications and make myself more valuable. I am a very young 46. This video has helped give me that extra push. Thanks.
@peterbaumgartner48784 жыл бұрын
I agree with you for sure. I did help desk for 2.years at countless places. Earned my CCNA and security+ and no promotion or talks of training to move up when that company said that they, "love to hire from within". F that always be on the lookout for amazing opportunities
@shlugshining86845 жыл бұрын
In my first IT job I worked for absolute minimum wage, for two years. My second job, doing exactly the same same thing, paid about twice as much. A year later, I was making that + $10,000 extra, again doing much the same thing. I probably should've got out of the first job a little quicker, but I learned a hell of a lot. As others have said: get that initial experience on your resume, get some certs, and then get something with respectable pay.
@88Xlmk5 жыл бұрын
Understaffed IT department - NEVER. One person is more than enough to cover 2000 people and the server and network infrastructure. This was the case when I was trying at Accenture few years ago. In the end I was not hired, because I wanted too much by their standards - 800$(in my country this is just 100$ more than what you need to live - the poverty line). Also last week I was in an interview for new security department of a pretty big company. The add was for second line job. They would expect a person with Security certification, IP network cert, Splunk, etc. You had to re-build their entire IP network for the office in my country, set up the servers and services for everything, set up Security monitoring infrastructure and be on call almost 24/7. After this I realized they have no idea what they are doing, but decided to see how they will react at the end - I told them my expected salary before bonuses and extras and they tried for more than 2 times lower at 1300$. How the hell do you expect anybody to take the job with what you require him to do. PS - everything is after taxes with is 30%.
@auxiliary6 жыл бұрын
This video came up on my feed even though i subscribe to you and but i missed this one. You hit it on the head. Currently looking for work and have people callig me for low pay jobs and i tell them i am not interested. For 2018 i have decided to get a bunch of certs this year.
@DetectiveStablerSVU5 жыл бұрын
Find new or hot technology trends, get a job related to one even if pay is rough, take a risk and jump off to somewhere else specializing in it. Consulting is a great way to go with that kind of plan. But don't stay stagnant! Stay marketable throughout your career.
@phoenixbyrd795 жыл бұрын
Just applied to an entry level it job at $14 an hour. Hoping I get it though. Changing careers from working in warehouse most my life. Love working on computers and learning new things at home and want to branch out and make a career with that passion instead.
@Ravenx2175 жыл бұрын
Lol I’m in the exact same scenario with some certs and college for IT. I am tired of warehouse too, did you get the job?
@christianjavier17765 жыл бұрын
James Gundlach making a change from Sales. Enjoy selling and reaching goals. Looking for a new change though. Always liked computers and troubleshooting. Hope this works out for me. Doing the 12-week entry level course. God I hope I didn’t make a bad choice.
@SpartanHero3215 жыл бұрын
I was in a similar position as you, realizing that wanted to get into computers. I ended up doing courses for web development and was able to land a amazing job at a fortune 20 company. Just hang in there and keep applying and networking!
@fernandoperez96125 жыл бұрын
man' I'm 21 and already tired my warehouse job, picking and packing everyday, bout to kill myself haha. Hopefully something comes up when I start chasing :(
@octaviusthird67265 жыл бұрын
If you keep gaining new skills that are in demand, your career will advance. The first 3 years are the toughest. Best of luck to your career.
@miztamacondatrack2 жыл бұрын
Got my first help desk position at a sports betting company and the starting rate is 25
@brentwiley33305 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the great information! At 42 I decided to enter the IT field. I was hired as an intern making $17 an hour and learned a ton. Now I have my first full-time job and feel very lucky with my hourly rate (almost double). I felt starting with the help desk was the best decision to gain experience. It's crazy how much I have learned over the last year. Just need to figure out where I want to go next.
@MundoOval6 жыл бұрын
I completely understand you. Work on entry level IT job in Brazil is even worst.
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
Good luck to you!
@enriquekekay86 жыл бұрын
Learn so much from being in help desk and great video !
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
So very true!
@bobfrog48365 жыл бұрын
I regularly get head hunters contacting me for help desk/tech support roles in the BAY AREA for $15 to $20/ hr. Not only is that way lower than I was making in a similar role literally 20 years ago but it is around what fast food in the area pays. Companies don't value support roles and the bulk of people who do tech support are using tricks (reboot, delete cache/cookies) to resolve issues. Most of the time it works out but when it doesn't it really doesn't and just check out what happened to the DNC and the email hack for a case in point.
@KittySwrive6 жыл бұрын
I’m a woman in the IT field I started in 2013 I love it, But the jobs I’ve been getting so far have been short term. I learned early on you negotiate on your salary and it makes you feel like a winner.
@shanab2376 жыл бұрын
KittySwrive hi sis I’m trying to get into the IT but really don’t know where to start especially in a big city on Atlanta. Any advice?
@kiaraclark52815 жыл бұрын
I just started in IT about a month ago😫 any tips?
@anadragos83405 жыл бұрын
Yeah so true! I'm in IT and I started as a temp making 15 an hour in Support more product based for schools and we handle all of the schools and districts in the USA and some over seas, but still doing everything that a basic help desk does. They liked me and I survived. Lol So now I'm making 22 an hr. Big jump, but it helped. Now I want to be able to move up and that's what I am working on.😃
@altaccount87495 жыл бұрын
What to do when the entry level wants 2-3 years experience.
@addd213235 жыл бұрын
Continue to work on your education (degree) and certs and keep applying. Eventually you will be given a shot somewhere.
@tylerchilton6375 жыл бұрын
You should still apply for the job. Some employers have unrealistic expectations. Once they realize someone with 2-3 years of experience doesn't want to work for $15-ish an hour they will start to consider applicants who don't meet the experience requirements.
@pepperjackshack24395 жыл бұрын
Entry level service desk -> entry level admin (MSP)
@hanspeter22105 жыл бұрын
"Go fuck yourself" and Look for another job
@thomasgurchiek33015 жыл бұрын
2-3 years of professional experience is not entry level. Around 1-2 years you should be planning with your manager/director on next steps for you in your career with the company, not looking for an entry level position.
@CT-yc4gd2 жыл бұрын
I had a guy try to offer me 20/hr with uncertain hours. I make 20/hr as a fucking security guard at an HoA.... with benefits as well as secured hours. I'm still training on my own and with Udemy courses. But it pisses me off that companies prey on people who are desperate.
@jimmywantwingy5 жыл бұрын
This video hurts. I have had a IT job since my internship at the beginning of 2012. My first job was the best. Amazing people but they cut our salaries. My first boss was there for 20 years and taught me so much, and aided me in finding a new job. One of the sayings that always popped up. "Everything works, why do we pay you?" or...... "Everything is broken why do we pay you?" My best suggestion for people coming out of college or just getting started. It takes time. You probably can / know how to do the advanced stuff, but they aren't going to hand those duties over. In my opinion....i'd stay away from IT firms that service small business etc. Your best bet is to find a business (such as a steel mill, bank, school) that has their own IT department. Finally...my biggest pay raises is from finding a better job. It will all work out but it takes time.
@beardedgrandpagaming7986 жыл бұрын
I love your honesty. It needs to be said.
@dsteiersteier20265 жыл бұрын
The problem is that recruiters try to keep you at the same level and around the same pay. Don't keep accepting the same type of job all of the time. get more education, more certifications and more experience and move up. Don't just accept what recruiters offer you.
@countsmarald3 жыл бұрын
The two common startpoints I've seen is for desktop support and school districts. One other spot that exists that a lot of people overlook is retail support (register systems, inventory systems, and online payment processing systems and the like). If you are looking, dont overlook retail as a starting point.
@marcellowheeler886 жыл бұрын
Some advice from me. Get your certs/experience and move out. Those entry level jobs have a high turnover rate for a reason. The best thing I would do is, is work as a contractor on a base. 9 times outta 10 the starting pay is at least 15+ an hour. I did the help desk job for a few years and moved on. You're working twice as hard as everyone else while they're making a bit more money than you.
@PMPerformance5 жыл бұрын
Certs are not as important as actual job experience. I work with guys making 6 figures with no certs, no schooling or anything. They are just good at what they do and milked experience somewhere else. If you are new new new though, certs may help land you something quicker. I can tell you though from experience as working for a Managed Services company, we hire people with nothing and if they have drive and pick it up, they have the opportunity to move up quick
@Death_Metal_Head2 жыл бұрын
Your videos are extremely informative. Thanks again!
@ericglover54863 жыл бұрын
"Your IT department makes no money, There's no money coming from the IT department" **LAUGHS IN POWER BI & IoT**
@NomadicBrian5 жыл бұрын
I'm a Sr. App Developer now but I have done some of the other jobs. Computer Operator, Internal Tech Support, Call Center Tech Support (Logitech), Data Entry, I didn't mind the tech support but I hated the call center atmosphere. The pay for the other jobs I did was low. I did learn from them though. I would suggest in you like technology as a career do these jobs while you are studying to move into a better pay job role. You have to research where you want to go and make a solid plan for getting it. Realize that a lot of your free time is going to be spent studying and applying. If you want to write code you have to practice coding all the time for example. Your goals will be reached. Just keep reminding yourself of that when the lower paying tech jobs start to get to you.
@NiKedidIT125 жыл бұрын
Network Engineer here, this happens alot in IT. The way I "fixed" my salary was to talk to my manager, be honest if its a good manager they will set you up for a promotion by giving you more important projects so they can talk you up to their bosses. If they dont do that then it's a big RED FLAG you should start looking, your manager just wants to keep you at that role and you wont get anywhere salary wise.
@PrinceJuvy5 жыл бұрын
This guy is pretty spot on. About the low wages and how most companies dont care about the IT department. I worked for one company and I moved up to EDI and I was made to be both EDI and a DBA at the same time and the pay was not worth it for all the hours and holidays I had to work. I personally ditched the IT field after that a year ago and am trying to figure something else out, it killed my passion.
@stormchaser4192 жыл бұрын
Take this from an older person who has worked in the work world in other fields. 1. You MUST NOT WAIT on your future 2. You MUST GET AGRESSIVE and ASSERTIVE with your career. 3. You MUST not get complacent in your job 4. You must market yourself continuously. 5. You must be open to changing jobs often if you want to get ahead in this world 6. You must be open to moving to a different state if possible with family obligations to move yourself ahead salary wise 7. You must go to glassdoor to see what others make 8. You MUST not stay in jobs because of laziness and complacency. 9. You MUST always be looking to get more aggressive and assertive with getting more certs, masters degree and experience and then get aggressive with looking for companies that WILL PAY you substantially more. 10. Welcome to reality.
@zachicusmaximus55515 жыл бұрын
My company has a total of 4 techs that work with clients directly, other than the a few at the helpdesk. There are a mass amount of users. Like a lot. Average tech ticket queue is around 30 at all times, and for my position specifically, most are not easy/quick tickets. Fairly common to need to complete 200-300 on site tickets a month to keep up, along with a ton of non-ticketed "projects" for the execs. Pay is above average for sure but it's a "entry" level +++ position meaning most stuff is somewhat googleable knowledge with occasional deep dives into the realm of "shouldn't be my job" territory. Just one example of what you may come across in a lower level IT job that doesn't highly regard the tech department.
@georgelopez82875 жыл бұрын
Your definition of helpdesk task, pretty reasonable. Actual helpdesk task, troubleshoot the dying exchange server while being screamed at by the companies VP and your boss.
@afnanhaider56734 жыл бұрын
My VP is a scumbag. He is a non technical person because his original field is Capital Planning and Adminisration.
@bennyfromboston5 жыл бұрын
I graduated with a IT degree in May. Learn VERY QUICKLY that if you don't know how to program; you are kind of screwed! Luckily python skills were good enough to get me a DevOps/Cloud Engineering role. i know not everyone likes programming but no one can deny that those skills open up many doors!
@lagimmediafiles64785 жыл бұрын
I Love My IT Assistant Support Staff Job... Thank You Lord.
@bradrickrobinson74522 жыл бұрын
Great eye opener!!! Thanks for your hard work!!!
@braneburne44096 жыл бұрын
Hey bro, i recently start watching at your vids, so far i have enjoy them, keep up the good work
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! I appreciate that and I'm glad you are enjoying them. What other kind of videos would you be interested in?
@braneburne44096 жыл бұрын
@@Itcareerquestions nothing in my head at this time, will let you know
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
Sounds good. Thank you for taking the time to leave a comment!
@cheyennealvis82845 жыл бұрын
Guys PLEASE study VMWARE and Microsoft Azure!! Resumes are scanned by an app written in C# that values calibri font. Make sure you have a skills and experience section on the front page and pepper it with key words. As many apps, operating systems, and network protocols that you can find. This is not for HR or your hiring manager. It's for the C# scanner app. If your resume hits an 80% match it gets pulled. Don't just search helpdesk. Also look up application support.
@DK-ki2fh5 жыл бұрын
Damn. That's crazy. Can you give me some more info about that scanner app? What is it called? How do you know this?
@Jc_true6 жыл бұрын
Bro, you're so right.....smh....when will they value us 😭😭😭
@Itcareerquestions6 жыл бұрын
When new management comes around.
@michalyne5 жыл бұрын
They'll value you when their is a disaster, and need to protect themselves from those that would steal their data and do them harm.
@Varkolak885 жыл бұрын
i just found a new opportunity and im getting a 30% raise. biggest lesson i learned is this, they'll value you after you learn to value yourself and take your skills to another company. do yourself a favor, apply to other companies and see what they'll pay for your existing experience. fortune favors the bold. good luck.
@maxwellwagoner-watts47475 жыл бұрын
When IT is not a cost. When marketing is a part of IT. When E-Com is part of IT.
@Ramms236 жыл бұрын
True, true, true. Gain experience and don't look back, keep searching for new opportunities. You couldn't say it any better Sack.
@QuasarRedshift5 жыл бұрын
answer for everything : reboot
@saullozano5424 жыл бұрын
As a computer technician. Everything he is saying is true. That’s why I’m moving over to electronic technician in a hospital and starting my own IT company. 👍
@manuelcastro35063 жыл бұрын
Attaboy. That’s what I want to do. However I almost got the certification and I need experience. If you are willing to pay fair, ring me up. As in message me lol