Decoding the SysAdmin: Shedding Light on the Role of IT MVPs

The age-old question, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” has long been answered with occupations such as: firefighter, ballerina, doctor, or princess. Why, you may wonder, does systems administrator rarely make the cut? As a critical member of the organization they support, surely a more rewarding and interesting career than SysAdmin can’t possibly exist!

While we know how exciting, versatile, and important our jobs truly are, do the people closest to us understand? When you get a text message from your remote monitoring system during a soccer game or dance recital, what do you tell your kids? If you break from analyzing system logs to enjoy a family dinner, how do you explain that a log is more than a chopped up tree trunk? Even with all your tireless explaining, how many times have you heard a version of this phrase: “My mom does something with computers…I think”?

In honor of Systems Administrator Day this year, we want to know what your family thinks you do 24/7, rain or shine, day or night. Whether it’s “Stuff on a computer,” “Emails their friends,” “Fixes problems,” or “Uhh…technology?”, let us know by July 18, and we’ll give you 250 THWACK points—and, if necessary, moral support from your fellow techies who do understand that you have the coolest job in the world.

Parents
  • "fixes things" is the shorthand I typically use when I know I'l have the "cows looking at a passing train", "deer caught in the headlights" expressions or simply peristaltic eye rolling if I explain further.  Case in point - our retired phone/backups guy stopped by last Friday, saw me looking at NetPath and asked me to explain what I was doing.  I did my heartfelt best - and I am typically pretty durn good at breaking things down so most can understand - but he could only muster "it's way over my head".

Comment
  • "fixes things" is the shorthand I typically use when I know I'l have the "cows looking at a passing train", "deer caught in the headlights" expressions or simply peristaltic eye rolling if I explain further.  Case in point - our retired phone/backups guy stopped by last Friday, saw me looking at NetPath and asked me to explain what I was doing.  I did my heartfelt best - and I am typically pretty durn good at breaking things down so most can understand - but he could only muster "it's way over my head".

Children
No Data
Thwack - Symbolize TM, R, and C