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10 things your IT guy would like you to know

itGuy 10 things your IT guy would like you to know

I didn’t write this. I got it from a site, who got it from a site that no longer exists. Although the tone is a bit whiny, it is essentially true. It is all about the 10 things your IT guy would like you to know. This will make everyone’s lives easier for real! Take a minute to read through this and see if your IT guy thinks you are an idiot or a normal user :)

1. If you ask me technical questions please don’t argue with me because you don’t like my answer. If you think you know more about the topic, why ask? And if I’m arguing with you…it’s because I am positive that I am correct, otherwise I’d just say “I don’t know” or give you some tips on where to look it up, I don’t have the time to just argue for the sake of it.
2. Starting a conversation by insulting yourself (i.e. “I’m such an idiot”) will not make me laugh, or feel sorry for you;  all it will do is remind me that yes, you are an idiot and that I am going to hate having to talk to you. Trust me;  you don’t want to start a call that way.
3. I am OK with you making mistakes, fixing them is my job. I am not OK with you lying to me about a mistake you made. It makes it much harder to resolve and thus makes my job more difficult. Be honest and we can get the problem resolved and continue on with our business.
4. There is no magic “Fix it” button. Everything takes some amount of work to fix, and not everything is worth fixing or even possible to fix. If I say that you just need to re-do a document that you accidentally deleted 2 months ago, please don’t get mad at me.  I’m not ignoring your problem, and it’s not that I don’t like you, I just can’t always fix everything.
5. Not everything you ask me to do is “urgent”. In fact, by marking things as “urgent” every time, you almost ensure that I treat none of it as a priority.
6. You are not the only one who needs help, and you usually don’t have the most urgent issue. Give me some time to get to your problem, it will get fixed.
7. Emailing me several times about the same issue in the same day is not only unnecessary, it’s highly annoying. Emails will stay until I delete them. I won’t delete them until I’m done with them. I will typically respond as soon as I have a useful update. If it is an urgent issue, let me know (see number 5).
8. Yes, I prefer email over telephone calls. It has nothing to do with being friendly, it’s about efficiency. It is much faster and easier for me to list out a set of questions that I need you to answer than it is for me to call and ask you them one by one. You can find the answers at your leisure and while I’m waiting I can work on other problems.

9. Yes, I seem blunt and rude. It’s not that I mean to, I just don’t have the time to sugar coat things for you. I assume we are both adults and can handle the reality of a problem. If you did something wrong, I will tell you. I don’t care that it was a mistake, because it really makes no difference to me. Don’t take it personal, I just don’t want it to happen again.
10. And finally, yes, I can read your email, I can see what web pages you look at while you are at work, yes, I can access every file on your work computer, and I can tell if you are chatting with people on an instant messenger or chat room (and can also read what you are typing). But no, I don’t do it. It’s unethical, I’m busy, and in all reality you aren’t all that interesting. So unless I am instructed to specifically monitor or investigate your actions, I don’t. There really are much more interesting things on the internet than you.

The point of that article is one that everyone wants to make, whether they are in IT, or are testers, consultants, or engineers. The point is we are all trying to do our jobs the best that we can and it’s easiest to do that if we all work together, stop pointing fingers and give other people the space that we would like to get as well. If we can do that more often than not, things will go well and work out.

_TheWatchingYouAdmiN_

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16 Responses to “10 things your IT guy would like you to know”

  1. El Di Pablo says:

    Awesome! I just retweeted this on Twitter!

  2. appsbyaaron says:

    This was the single best article I’ve ever read. Accurate and funny. Thanks for helping me start the day with a good laugh.

  3. Aaron says:

    Dead on truth. Great read.

  4. [...] li um artigo no site asktheadmin.com, que é de um cara chamado Karl e que também leu este mesmo artigo em outro site, o Guy [...]

  5. I am glad you got a laugh this morning! I had a smoking server. Thanks for reading.

  6. Talk Binary says:

    Number 2 is extremely true not only in the IT world.

    As a student, I’ve been approached by numerous peers and when they open up with “I’m stupid” or something along those lines there seems to be a flag that goes up in my head. I tend to be monotone and point them in the right direction.

    If someone asks me a question straight out, I’m usually more friendly and try helping them out along the way.

    I too don’t like being reminded that the person asking a question is stupid. It just tends to turn me off.

    - Diego

  7. Zane says:

    It seems to me these “IT complaints” “things IT wants you to know” and “Your admin hates when” lists need to start changing IT to helpdesk.

    90% of the complaints on these lists apply to helpdesk not security admins, DBAs, Sysadmins, or anyone not on front line phones.

    And the 10% that do apply seem to apply to most jobs in general not just IT.

  8. Very, very true Diego! Thanks for stopping by.

  9. I am a MCSE and a MCDBA but I still wind up fielding calls for support when the need arises. Its nice to be in a place that has enough people to cover everything all the time but in the real world I find that is NOT true.

    Thanks for the comment Zane. BTW What do you do?

  10. Zane says:

    Karl,

    I’ve worked in small and large environment and I do understand that in some places we have to wear many hats. When we jump in to take a call though we are stepping into a helpdesk role at that point.

    Currently I am a Systems Engineer in a medium sized business environment. We have a fairly large IT team, probably in the 40-50 area. Our roles are pretty clearly defined and don’t cross much.

  11. [...] I did not write this article, but I did find it from AskTheAdmin blog (also Guy McDowell also posted it), who got it from a site that no longer exists. Although the tone [...]

  12. [...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Teguh Aditya, Karl Gechlik. Karl Gechlik said: AskTheAdmin:: 10 things your IT guy would like you to know http://bit.ly/8FzRL5 [...]

  13. Craig M. Rosenblum says:

    Is this a new article, I am sure I have read and seen stuff like this before. Great article and I agree 100%….

    The reason there are so many tech humor sites is because the crap IT/TechSupport have to deal with in the problems and users ability to explain and manage that.

  14. Hi Craig – as the first line in the post states that we used it from our buddy Guy Mcdowell’s website. Thanks for stopping by!

  15. [...] Source Catégories:Uncategorized Commentaires (0) Rétroliens (0) Laisser un commentaire Rétrolien [...]

  16. Anatoly P says:

    wow this is right on the dot!

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