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Looking for a Tier 1 ISP Mentor for career advice.
- Subject: Looking for a Tier 1 ISP Mentor for career advice.
- From: jsahala at gmail.com (joshua sahala)
- Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2011 11:53:10 -0700
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]> <CAA8=vb45jNS3J85V03LdHfbRg0u7sOv8OHkCB4G=oikuW6JU9A@mail.gmail.com> <CANGwj1wUBQajdCLUpVEryBH2+tWOcmiLYL9B3k2=F0GVZ=-B4Q@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]>
tyler,
some additional "soft" skills that will help you distinguish yourself
from others:
- learn to write well: take some creative writing classes in addition
to technical writing. being able to efficiently write clear,
concise, and effective documentation is a skill that is necessary,
and i daresay, required, especially for senior-level staff.
- learn how to present/speak: join the local toastermasters. grok
tufte's 'visual display of quantitative information' (or something
similar -- this goes back to writing effective and concise
documentation)
- in addition to business and finance, learn negotiation techniques.
'getting to yes' is a good book; there are many others
- learn time/task/project management: you should be able to accurately
guage how long things take, task interdepence, and how to structure a
(simple) project. try a few different methods to find one that works
for you, and then build and rebuild your home lab using your project
plan. this is also a good time to practise documentation ;)
- get involved: join/start local users groups, go to a conference or
two, subscribe to/read mailing lists on topics which interest you, or
which are relevant to something you are studying/playing with
- to reiterate what others have said:
learn to troubleshoot. learn to troubleshoot. learn to troubleshoot.
- develop an efficient, comprehensive methodology, and stick to it (a
checklist can be helpful)
- learn to take notes as you work through your procedure (what you
did, what was the result: this will aid in writing both root-cause
reports and operational procedures -- more documentation practise)
- as you gain experience, re-evaluate and optimise, but be consistent
in your approach
- be able to explain and justify your procedure(s); teaching and
learning from others makes you both better. mentoring will be an
extremely valuable skill to your hiring manager/team (and will
better position you for leadership roles)
- learn how to use $favourite_search_engine in order to find answers
you might also consider getting a juniper j-series box (or running
bird on a *nix box, or three). a ccnp will teach you cisco's way, but
most provider networks are heterogenous, and the ability to understand
a non-cisco device (and moreover, a non-cisco-style cli/config), will
benefit you long-term (imho).
above all, have fun with what you are doing. this industry can be a
lot of fun, but it is also stressful, and if you aren't enjoying what
you are learning/doing, it might be time to re-evaluate your
focus/priorities.
hth
/joshua