Arathain Kelvar wrote:
See this is what bugs me about Admin. They love to tell the billable folks what "their job description is". And they are almost universally wrong. But, even if they were correct, it STILL doesn't matter. Because everyone's job description is to pull together and service the client.
You have no idea how corporations work internally, do you? "Your guys" are not the boss, who we work for. Your field is not more important, and despite your little prima donna act, the "admin" types (who do not represent one department either, you're lumping the entire rest of the company into "them" and setting yourself above them) do not answer to you. What your'e saying might be true if the client was paying for the service directly, but they are not. They have a contract.
Your management gets together with the management of IT (it doesn't matter that they work for the same company. The managementof IT has equal authority to the management of any other department. In most companies, the CIO is equal in authority to the CFO and other such executives.) The management of IT asks the management of department X what services they want. Department X replies, and IT tells them what it will cost to implement those services. Department X recoils, because they didn't realize it, so they say they can only pay significantly less than the stated cost. So then negotiations continue until a contract, detailing the costs and the "Service Level Agreement" (a description of what services will be provided and in what timeframe) is finalized.
Anything outside that SLA that is done by your IT department is being done as a
favor to you. Not only are they not obligated to do it, but it is usually detrimental to the company bottom line for them to go beyond the SLA, as it takes IT resources away from where your department management already decided they were needed most. While Engineer Joe is getting help figuring out how to type a **** web address into a browser and so incompetent he takes 20 minutes to do it, Engineer Steve cannot do his job because his computer has completely crashed and Engineer Joe is monopolizing IT with his trivial bullshit.
So you should dump your arrogance and realize that when the department gives the collective "**** you" (and they will, with management support) to someone for making demands not supported by the SLA, they are ultimately benefiting the shareholder and the profits.
IT provides the services they are contracted to do as a department, and nothing more. If you want more, you have to pay for it. In advance, as part of the contract.
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They love to tell the billable folks what "their job description is"....Regardless, the only folks in this company with an actual technical job description are the admin folks. The other descriptons are generic, as the specifics rely on the current contract...I love this response. This is the fastest way for Admin to be shown the door in my company.
The arrogance here is amazing. First of all, you have no clue what the individual job descriptions are of people in other departments. Secondly, I'm discussing IT as a departmental whole, not individual job descriptions. Thirdly, no engineer can get an IT person fired, especially when the IT person is giving the response they have been told to give by their management. The figurative "**** you" response is FREQUENTLY mandated. "You are not give support beyond what the customer is entitled to get." In most companies, helpdesk agents can get written up for too often giving help that the customer is not entitled to get from them, because it sets a precedent and unreasonable expectations which will result in later escalations.
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Oh yeah - remember how I said admin's supposed to provide support? That includes redirecting the engineers to the appropriate personnel. So no - don't stick them somewhere, show them where to take them.
This is such a wonderful "pot-kettle" moment. I love it when people call IT and demand to know the number for the tax department. Or even another unrelated IT department. **** off, IT isn't a directory service. Especially in a large company, one division won't even know another division exists. If you call the wrong place, don't expect to get any information. You know what you said about billable hours and not wanting to pay engineer rates for him to learn computer stuff? Great. So why do you want to pay IT rates for something you're supposed to call the switchboard for?