Hiring Disparity
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@Carnival-Boy said:
A friend of mine is a bookmaker. He actually had to leave the UK entirely, as all the major British bookies have moved offshore for tax purposes. He moved to Guernsey. When he lost his job there, the only similar jobs he got offered were in Vegas, Cyprus and Australia. Again, the salaries varied widely, as it is not a "standardised" career, but I imagine he's pushing towards the $500k mark. I'm sure I could think of other examples just within my circle of friends and family.
Never considered the world of bookies before. No idea what that career field is like. Very niche field, I suppose, which is why I've never met one. I'm sure there are many tiny fields or job that have the issue. They would be like IT, that makes sense. The thing that makes IT dramatic is that it is one of, if not the, largest field. It's up there with teachers, nurses, engineers, secretaries, receptionists and factory workers. It's one of the few fields in the US where staff numbers in the millions. A significant portion of the US population works in IT and/or software development. Significant meaning real percentages, not fractions of a percentage. Only a couple different fields can be that big. Given that IT is needed in every town, every business, nearly every endeavour.... that you have the issues that are faced by fields so small as to have effective zero people in a country is staggering.
That it is bookies that we need to compare to rather than teachers is really my point, I guess.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
Secondly, 99% of IT jobs are only advertised through IT recruitment agencies.
Is this true? I've not found this at all. Many are, certainly, but 99%? None of the big places seem to do this (Apple, Microsoft, Exxon-Mobil, Google, Facebook, Amazon, etc.) Medium sized ones seem to do it a lot. And the SMB doesn't seem to do it at all, that I've seen.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I'd like to see established IT certifications and qualifications that are on a par with, say, accountancy.
Can't you pass those exams just from studying in books too? I've not tried or looked into it, I have no idea what they are like. But I imagine that book learning is all that is needed to get accounting credentials.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
I'd like to see established IT certifications and qualifications that are on a par with, say, accountancy.
Can't you pass those exams just from studying in books too? I've not tried or looked into it, I have no idea what they are like. But I imagine that book learning is all that is needed to get accounting credentials.
Not even close. For example, to sit for the CPA exam, which has four parts, you have to have a certain number of logged hours in certain types of work, primarily tax and audit (two separate things). And to sit for the CPA exam, unless they've changed it, you are required to have at least at Bachelor's degree IN accounting. Less than 10% of people get their CPA license on the first try. Most need at least two rounds. The thing about accounting is that it's as much knowing tax law, if not more, as it is how to "do the numbers". My father is a CPA and says that so much of accounting is learning the law that makes up a given scenario, etc. Without hands-on experience, and a lot of it, you would never pass the CPA exam, regardless of how much you studied.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
Finally, I think the IT certification industry could be better. In theory, Microsoft certification sounds great. But in reality, it's fallen in to disrepute over the years.
I agree, but I don't think that certification can come from vendors. Those certs (MCSE for example) have an important place in certifying people on products and vendor published best practices, but what other industry (maybe mechanics) relies on vendor certifications rather than industry ones? The MCSE isn't there to tell people that you are a competent IT professional, only that if you are, you know how to apply that to Microsoft's products in a Microsoft-approved way.
What IT lacks is any sort of general certification for the field. CompTIA tries to do this but only addresses the entry level and only addresses it rather weakly. Their Network+ exam does cover a certain minimum level of network understanding but does nothing to talk about general IT skills, business alignment, understanding the role of IT, dealing with things across vendors (which is pretty important in IT!)
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@thanksaj said:
Not even close. For example, to sit for the CPA exam, which has four parts, you have to have a certain number of logged hours in certain types of work, primarily tax and audit (two separate things). And to sit for the CPA exam, unless they've changed it, you are required to have at least at Bachelor's degree IN accounting. Less than 10% of people get their CPA license on the first try. Most need at least two rounds. The thing about accounting is that it's as much knowing tax law, if not more, as it is how to "do the numbers". My father is a CPA and says that so much of accounting is learning the law that makes up a given scenario, etc. Without hands-on experience, and a lot of it, you would never pass the CPA exam, regardless of how much you studied.
Requirements are silly, though. Logged hours means that you are working in the field prior to certification. So that's an advanced cert. I know that CPA is way beyond "accountant." Same for MBA. You are supposed to be a career manager before attempting an MBA. The CPA exam is hard, I understand, but I think we are talking more of a "normal" account level certification here. IT has plenty of exams that require "logged hours" but they still don't get harder, they just get weird because anyone can log hours.
Knowing tax law is just learning from books though, right? Not like CPAs can practice law as attorneys before taking the exam.
Having to have a degree in a field is just more paper. They do that to RNs too.
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1990 I started school to become an Automotive Technician and was introduced to ASE. The people who started the National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence wanted to have a governing body to protect both the technicians, shop owner and the customers WITHOUT government involvement.You can read more here. When I was an automotive tech, I had certs for A1-A7 ( there was no A9 at the time) which you can see here.
ASE covers Cars & Light trucks, collision repair, medium-heavy duty truck, truck equipment, school & transit buses, auto & truck parts.
I believe that since ASE encompasses a lot area in the "automotive" world, we could mimic their organisation for IT. It could help bring more structure and provide us with a voice or even a medium for generic advertising. Did you know outside of the SMB sector, that businesses or employees don't know what IT is or what an IT person is? Creating a non-profit org like ASE for IT could help change that and more, it could bring change to the hiring disparity.
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@technobabble said:
Did you know outside of the SMB sector, that businesses or employees don't know what IT is or what an IT person is?
I don't know what IT is! I asked that very question in a new thread on here a few weeks ago, and was still none the wiser. I often tell people I'm a Computer Programmer rather than an IT Manager, as I can understand what that is. When people ask me to describe what I do as an IT Manager I can't really explain.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@technobabble said:
Did you know outside of the SMB sector, that businesses or employees don't know what IT is or what an IT person is?
I don't know what IT is! I asked that very question in a new thread on here a few weeks ago, and was still none the wiser. I often tell people I'm a Computer Programmer rather than an IT Manager, as I can understand what that is. When people ask me to describe what I do as an IT Manager I can't really explain.
A friend saw a post about IT techs that I posted and asked me what is an it? I had to explain IT duties could be: computer repair, networking, malware/AV cleanup, backup management etc.
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@technobabble said:
@Carnival-Boy said:
@technobabble said:
Did you know outside of the SMB sector, that businesses or employees don't know what IT is or what an IT person is?
I don't know what IT is! I asked that very question in a new thread on here a few weeks ago, and was still none the wiser. I often tell people I'm a Computer Programmer rather than an IT Manager, as I can understand what that is. When people ask me to describe what I do as an IT Manager I can't really explain.
A friend saw a post about IT techs that I posted and asked me what is an it? I had to explain IT duties could be: computer repair, networking, malware/AV cleanup, backup management etc.
lol, I guess not everyone can know everything about everything. The last universal man died in 1887(?) I'll have to check that.
EDIT: Hmmm, probably wrong about that date. I can't seem to find the article that I read...
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@technobabble said:
Did you know outside of the SMB sector, that businesses or employees don't know what IT is or what an IT person is?
I don't know what IT is! I asked that very question in a new thread on here a few weeks ago, and was still none the wiser. I often tell people I'm a Computer Programmer rather than an IT Manager, as I can understand what that is. When people ask me to describe what I do as an IT Manager I can't really explain.
I think IT is a horrible term. I prefer "Business Infrastructure."
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@technobabble said:
A friend saw a post about IT techs that I posted and asked me what is an it? I had to explain IT duties could be: computer repair, networking, malware/AV cleanup, backup management etc.
That's shocking. That's up there with not knowing what a teacher or engineer is. Although, in reality, most people only pretend to know what an engineer is and don't actually know much about the field at all and would have no idea what an industrial engineer, manufacturing systems engineer, civil engineer, ceramics engineer or other fields do.
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Well, this is not the article that I was looking for (insert Star Wars joke) but it's close enough: http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/497891/Renaissance-man
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@Carnival-Boy said:
I often tell people I'm a Computer Programmer rather than an IT Manager, as I can understand what that is.
Well a computer programmer is not an IT field but a software development field. Related but not in IT itself, which would add confusion. And IT Manager means that you manager IT people, that's a management discipline not a technical one. So both titles suggest that you are not in IT, just related to it (either beside it or over it.) IT Managers can be IT people who became managers (Peter Principle) or non-IT people that are used as managers (Dilbert Principle) or some combination. They can be hands or or not. But the "IT Manager" title makes no sense as an IT description because it isn't one, it's a manager role. Manager is pretty easy to understand. If those people are IT people (harder to describe) then probably you are an IT Manager.
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Managers don't just have to manage people.
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But Managers usually (in every other industry) just Manage. Generally a manager is the least qualified person to do what the people under them are doing. When I see that as someone's title I assume they are dumb and don't have a clue (says the person with Managing Director in their title).
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@Carnival-Boy said:
Managers don't just have to manage people.
That's what the term means. Especially in IT. There is no "manager" role in IT outside of people. Using that title without being a manager definitely would create job confusion everywhere.
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@Minion-Queen said:
But Managers usually (in every other industry) just Manage. Generally a manager is the least qualified person to do what the people under them are doing. When I see that as someone's title I assume they are dumb and don't have a clue (says the person with Managing Director in their title).
That's the Dilbert principle. The old Peter principle was that someone would work their way through the ranks and only manage when they went above and beyond what the field would provide. Engineering used to be this way. The best, most senior engineers would traditionally become managers after needing more money than being a senior engineer could provide. But they figured out that the best people were being wasted as managers where they were not skilled instead of in engineering where they were skilled.
So the Dilbert Principle came about to have the least skilled be wasted as managers rather than the most.
In theory, you want career manages managing career techs. That way, in theory, both are doing what they love and are skilled at.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@thanksaj said:
Not even close. For example, to sit for the CPA exam, which has four parts, you have to have a certain number of logged hours in certain types of work, primarily tax and audit (two separate things). And to sit for the CPA exam, unless they've changed it, you are required to have at least at Bachelor's degree IN accounting. Less than 10% of people get their CPA license on the first try. Most need at least two rounds. The thing about accounting is that it's as much knowing tax law, if not more, as it is how to "do the numbers". My father is a CPA and says that so much of accounting is learning the law that makes up a given scenario, etc. Without hands-on experience, and a lot of it, you would never pass the CPA exam, regardless of how much you studied.
Requirements are silly, though. Logged hours means that you are working in the field prior to certification. So that's an advanced cert. I know that CPA is way beyond "accountant." Same for MBA. You are supposed to be a career manager before attempting an MBA. The CPA exam is hard, I understand, but I think we are talking more of a "normal" account level certification here. IT has plenty of exams that require "logged hours" but they still don't get harder, they just get weird because anyone can log hours.
Knowing tax law is just learning from books though, right? Not like CPAs can practice law as attorneys before taking the exam.
Having to have a degree in a field is just more paper. They do that to RNs too.
Not really. The law of tax and such is interesting because it's very much an applied study. You don't just sit down to study tax law for the sake of studying it. You work on a return and when you run across something (this is a very loose interpretation), you research the laws that would affect this situation and see how each do or don't apply. Also, the extent of a CPA "practicing law" is just holding POA on a client's behalf.
The thing is, though, that in the accounting field, unless you obtain a CPA license, you will not go very far. Most firms won't let you go beyond a junior level position without a CPA license. So you can't get to a senior-level position, a manager's position, and especially not a partner.
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Especially as IT is a department name and really not a name for anything else. IT as a title really only exists with the "IT Department" and to a lesser extent "IT Professionals" the latter being something that should probably be replaced with something better. To be a manager of IT refers to managing a department or IT pros. To what else could it refer?