Is Microsoft the New Apple?
-
@Carnival-Boy said:
I've probably met hundreds around the world and I have no idea what the IT skills of any of them are. Do you ask them their views on RAID5 when they bring you a coffee of something?
That's because they are not doing IT. Most IT pros don't even know what RAID 5 is. It's actually a "less than half" skill. And even those that know what it is rarely know how to apply that knowledge. L1 people do not normally know about RAID.
Receptionists and secretaries commonly do tech support in start ups. Every startup I've ever seen, in fact. I'm not sure I've ever seen a receptionist who wasn't doing, at the very least, their own support.
-
@Carnival-Boy said:
What were they doing?
The things that I've been saying. Things like setting up desktops for people.
-
I thought that was the Office Manager's job?
-
I find it odd that you want to run like a startup. Startups all hope to run like mature companies. Mature companies make profit and pay the bills. They rarely are living on borrowed time or digging themselves into an inescapable pit of debt. Startups appear cool and healthy because they don't have customers and don't need to make profit (or even have revenue.) But it is deceiving. The end is coming and they either strike it rich or, far more likely, die trying. It's a big gamble.
-
@Carnival-Boy said:
I thought that was the Office Manager's job?
Office Manager is the politically correct term for a secretary in the US. No one is actually called a secretary here, its not considered "correct." So new, made up, inflated titles are used like office manager, personal assistant, executive assistance or leverager are used. But they are just secretaries.
A receptionist is in the same category but normally greets people at the door, rather than assisting a certain person or group internally.
-
The sad thing is that being a secretary is a worthy, tough job. There is no reason for it not to get respect. A good secretary is invaluable. If I worked in that field, I would prefer the traditional term secretary. There is a reason why the third highest post in the US government is called the Secretary of State, not the Office Manager of State or the Personal Assistant of State. Secretary is actually a meaningful role.
-
I like the movie "The Proposal" mostly because it is cute and entertaining but also because Ryan Reynolds plays a secretary and it shows what a tough, but important, job it is. A good secretary is an extension of the person that they support. They can work as a team and be very important.
-
The secretary / office managers / receptionists that I have seen on the west coast (this includes Seattle, for example) are all very technical and you can tell just having a quick chat with them that they are power users and know their computers.
Having worked in big finance on the east coast, I've never met someone in the same job roles who is really ready to do anything more than write emails, check calendars, etc. Completely different in how they fit into the ecosystem. At a major financial I sat in a room with several secretaries (who had odd job titles to make them sound special) and they would need help with everything from plugging in the monitor to asking things like "what's a Mac?" Completely non-technical to the point that it made me sad for our education system (and these were secretaries driving BMWs and Mercedes, brand new, high end cars, owning ocean front homes in expensive markets, etc.) as they were barely out of college!!
-
@scottalanmiller said:
Startups actually don't run as lean as you think,
I don't think most do for the simple reason that there is massive popularity for books on how to become a Lean Startups. No-one would buy the books if they were already lean. It's not that I want our firm to run like a startup, it's that I want to take some of the best bits of the best startups and apply to them our mature firm. I'm not going to take the worst bits.
-
@Carnival-Boy said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Startups actually don't run as lean as you think,
I don't think most do for the simple reason that there is massive popularity for books on how to become a Lean Startups. No-one would buy the books if they were already lean. It's not that I want our firm to run like a startup, it's that I want to take some of the best bits of the best startups and apply to them our mature firm. I'm not going to take the worst bits.
I would just look for Lean bits, if that is the goal. It's not that what most startups do is "bad", it is that the needs and design of a startup is very different than the needs and design of a healthy, mature company. What might be the best possible thing for a Lean startup might still be horrible for an existing, profitable firm. Just as the processes that make Apple or Microsoft super rich would make a startup unable to survive.
Running Lean is great, but I would see if you can't find literature on running Lean as a general thing and avoid things that talk about startups entirely. A good book would not be one focused on startups. Best if it does not even consider them.
-
Our receptionists are reasonably technical. Five years ago they were sitting around doing nothing when we were quiet. I soon got them to start doing some work for me. I'll take help from wherever I can get it, and they couldn't have been keener to take on new tasks.
Sadly, some firms take on receptionists based on looks rather than abilities.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
Running Lean is great, but I would see if you can't find literature on running Lean as a general thing and avoid things that talk about startups entirely. A good book would not be one focused on startups. Best if it does not even consider them.
Definitely not. You should get influences from everywhere. Don't close you mind and think "we're this type of firm so we can only think about doing X". That's why mature firms fail.
-
I agree that our education system in the US is failing us, but I'm not really sure it's the school's place the be teaching a product. Which is probably why it doesn't happen now, general skills that can be applied to nearly anything is their goal.
That said adding a requirement that students be required to take 2-3 computer courses that cover everything from manually building a PC to installing an OS (Windows, Linux and Mac OS) to installing applications (and verifying junkware isn't getting installed at the same time) to knowing how to check that a certificate on a website is valid, to restoring your Android and iOS cellphones, etc, etc, etc. This might be one of the best possible assets for computer security in the future.
hmm.... This makes me think. My wife often helps create curriculum for her college, when she was teaching HS she came up with a plan to teach stats to HS students, and they implemented it, maybe she could do the same here - with the goal in the end that ALL degrees should include this/these required courses, because frankly this knowledge is helpful for everyone today.
-
@Dashrender said:
I agree that our education system in the US is failing us, but I'm not really sure it's the school's place the be teaching a product. Which is probably why it doesn't happen now, general skills that can be applied to nearly anything is their goal.
Teaching a product and teaching a skill are different. If you were in elementary school in 1980, it was common for schools to teach computing with actual programming. Once GUIs became available they generally stopped and resorted to teaching "Word" and "Excel" skills rather than computer skills. Very different things. They teach apps now, they don't teach about computers themselves.
-
I feel that all students should know programming (this can be taught to eight year olds no problem, it's finding teachers that's the issue), basic networking, basic computer parts, how they work, building a computer like you mentioned is good, etc. They need to know what these devices are. Computers have become magic black boxes to supposedly well educated people today.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
I feel that all students should know programming (this can be taught to eight year olds no problem, it's finding teachers that's the issue), basic networking, basic computer parts, how they work, building a computer like you mentioned is good, etc. They need to know what these devices are. Computers have become magic black boxes to supposedly well educated people today.
This, when I was working at a school I was talking with the principal, superintendent, and IT manager about doing an extra-curricular option for students. I was planning on volunteering to do it. However I knew in advance that the students who would show up would be the ones who didn't really need to learn this. You would need to make it a required course in order for it to have an effect. I had 4 weeks of lessons planned out... but the teachers union didn't like having a non-union employee teaching, even after I invited one of the "tech" teachers to supervise.
-
@coliver said:
but the teachers union didn't like having a non-union employee teaching, even after I invited one of the "tech" teachers to supervise.
No surprised there, teachers actually blocking student education because it is all about money, not the students. Teachers are one of the biggest problems with the schools today. Sure, some are great. But in general, how often are our kids taught by people who, if our kids learned to their level only, we would be ashamed of them? I expect my kids (I sure hope) to be educated far beyond the overall education of a normal teacher before getting out of high school. The bar is just so low, how can the schools teach to a decent level if the teachers in the schools are nowhere near that level?
The basic skills we often want kids to have are the skills teachers often lack themselves.
-
By the way, getting good computer education into the common core or into state curricula would be an amazing, grass roots project for the ML community to do via Change.org
-
@scottalanmiller said:
By the way, getting good computer education into the common core or into state curricula would be an amazing, grass roots project for the ML community to do via Change.org
Sure, except most schools (at least in upstate NY) are now getting rid of (or drastically reducing ) their computer science options in favor of vocational options (don't get me wrong vocational jobs are important too). School budgets really aren't doing so well upstate. Good to see that lotto money being put to good use.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
I agree that our education system in the US is failing us, but I'm not really sure it's the school's place the be teaching a product. Which is probably why it doesn't happen now, general skills that can be applied to nearly anything is their goal.
Teaching a product and teaching a skill are different. If you were in elementary school in 1980, it was common for schools to teach computing with actual programming. Once GUIs became available they generally stopped and resorted to teaching "Word" and "Excel" skills rather than computer skills. Very different things. They teach apps now, they don't teach about computers themselves.
I started Kindergarden in 1980, so I'm guessing I missed the programming days.