Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Then IT needs to start putting in some more hours. Maybe one day they'll start rivaling the engineers.
Sure. IT would love to do that. Of course, they don't have the budget to do that, since you didn't pay them for it.
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First thing you are forgetting, is that I am management. Management are engineers and are client-oriented people. They will all agree that client needs must be addressed. IT does not give the engineers a "**** you". They assist first, and if they see a potential problem developing, they bring it up at the next managers meeting (where more than likely, we'll tell them to develop a training or something to fix it).
Management are rarely engineers. Your company may be an exception. You'd be hard pressed to find an engineer in management (or anywhere else, for that matter) at a financial company, for example. Except maybe in IT. Secondly, no, they don't assist first. I've worked four different IT jobs, in 3 different industries, vastly different sized companies, and they're all the same: The frontline IT staff will generally get in trouble if they go too far beyond the stated SLA support on a regular basis. Yes, they make allowances for customer service purposes to a greater or lesser degree, but those exceptions have to be judiciously used.
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Again, IT has no contracts here, or in any other company I've worked for. (1100 employees)
So you don't use industry standard best practices for IT in your company, then? No SLAs or OLAs? The
ITIL compliant shop is the norm. They call them "best practices" for a reason...they tend to work well.
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Sure I do. I can look it up anytime.
Here, that would be a violation of privacy. Unless I report directly to you, or I report to someone who reports directly to you (on and on up the line), or you work for HR, you don't have access to my salary or contract information. You
might be able to find my job grade, to get a ballpark figure, give or take 20%.
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We're not customers. (here, or anywhere else I've worked)
This is an interesting statement, considering you also said...
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No, the client is what's important.
So are you the client or not?
Anyway, once again, it's an ITIL term. The person who needs assistance is the customer or client (the terms are synonymous). I prefer calling them "the user."
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LOL you'd last 5 minutes in my company. Even for large companies, this is fine. Say "call the switchboard - 555-5555". The holier-than-thou attitude is unnecessary.
Wait, for telling htem to cal the switchboard I'd last 5 minutes and have a holier than thou attitude?
"Call the switchboard" = "**** you." Anything other than giving them the answer = "**** you."
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I'm upper management. You know what I'd say if some intern walked into my office and asked me IT's number? I'd say hang on, let's see, it's 555-5555.
I wouldn't give them another department's number, because I don't know the number. When I need another department's number, I call the **** switchboard.
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Know why? I'm not a prick.
Funny how people change online.