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Previously on "Moving from the tech side to the business side"
There are benefits. I realised years ago that my tech skillset was going out of date and as I constantly contracted on my existing skillset I couldn't keep up.
Yep, switching to an evergreen, but still valuable, skillset is the smart move. Some of the laundry lists of skills you see advertised makes me laugh/wince. Especially when you look at the actual skills most people on those teams have.
So after a couple of stints in management positions I moved into my current role which is quite senior, but I kept being hands on, doing prototypes / mashups / advanced analysis. So to my team I look super hands on, to the business they think I'm one of the super smarts and to IT I'm a thorn.
It's a fine line to walk. You want to make IT's life easier but not start getting in to stuff that you're not in position to evaluate the full consequences of. Messed it up a few times but I think I've got the right balance now.
Plus I have one blot on my contracting career. I have a 40-39-1 interview record. Having failed to get a gig for the first time 4 years ago after the interview for a £1k a day role working with the executive board of a large FTSE company because I didn't have enough Senior experience, I plan to correct that loss later this year.
Yep, middle management is a fresh hell I intend to assiduously avoid. The good ones do very well though - and they stand out like a sore thumb.
There are benefits. I realised years ago that my tech skillset was going out of date and as I constantly contracted on my existing skillset I couldn't keep up.
But hang worked directly on the business side after a number of years when I gigged and came across the same issues & incompetent managers again & again I was able to drive them as well. Obviously they took the kudos and you did the work.
So after a couple of stints in management positions I moved into my current role which is quite senior, but I kept being hands on, doing prototypes / mashups / advanced analysis. So to my team I look super hands on, to the business they think I'm one of the super smarts and to IT I'm a thorn.
I like my teams to get the Kudos for their own work, I keep out of the limelight & tinker. But as my new VP said to me last month, I want you to manage and be front facing or if you want to do the tech stuff you can **** off to IT!, I will be choosing a different path imminently.
I suppose you're in the middle of the two hells somewhere, but on the 'paper shuffler' career path the perils of going into management loom. Step carefully.
Yep, middle management is a fresh hell I intend to assiduously avoid. The good ones do very well though - and they stand out like a sore thumb.
I see the pure tech guys out there in the trenches and I feel for them.
I feel same for the management drones who have to endure endless meetings, producing documents that no one reads, then they're first to have to re-apply for their own jobs when there's a shake up and they need to cut body count.
I suppose you're in the middle of the two hells somewhere, but on the 'paper shuffler' career path the perils of going into management loom. Step carefully.
Have to admit I feel a certain amount of survivor guilt. I see the pure tech guys out there in the trenches and I feel for them. Place I'm at one of the lead consultants on a key new project just left. I can sympathise with the months of dreadful implementations of dreadful new code that caused him to jump - now they've just lost all that experience at a vital time.
I feel like I've been pulled off the battlefield and now I'm sitting at a desk doing intelligence work while the war is raging on outside (to be overly dramatic).
I'm adding way more value on this side though.
I'd say most people on the business side aren't that strong and the skillset you need to be good on the technical side can really transfer over well (although most people on tech side aren't good). Most people struggle to pick up moderately complex topics quickly, are really poor at communicating those concepts and don't even grasp how important sharing information is. Rather than understanding the nature of complexity and the inevitable difficulties in delivering complex work they blame others or hide.
I remember years ago a bloke I worked with talked about how he wanted to get a cosy middle manager position and put his feet up. It disgusted me a lot - like, is that what you really want from your career? To just be one of the stuffed shirts. A bit of me feels like I've gone that way but just because staying on the battlefield is insane. You can't last, you either give up and settle into mediocrity or burn out. Most people settle from the start though.
But now I'm doing great work, really making a difference, and the worst wound I'm going to get is a bit of internal politics which I've spent years learning how to get round on the tech side anyway. (Again apologies for the ridiculous warfare analogies.)
I've been on the business side for 20 years. I have enough technical skills to be dangerous & excellent business skills. This's means I am normally referred to as shadow IT but I have carved out a niche as an expert in start ups, putting in processes, systems and BI/analytics.
As the startups get bigger I am considered to be a thorn in the side of any CIO and they come gunning. Like now.
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