Looking Ahead: SysAdmins in 2025

This year has changed the way we work—from our roles and responsibilities to the way we interact and socialize with others. Responsibilities in IT were already shifting with instances of data center/IT role convergence on the rise. The SolarWindsRegistered 2020 IT Trends Report: The Universal Language of IT revealed security and application management are more frequently becoming part of day-to-day tasks. However, the pandemic has served to accelerate this shift. In 2020, we’ve been forced to adapt faster than ever before, and the growing remote workforce has complicated—and extended—the roles of IT pros even further.

With SysAdmin Day just around the corner on Friday, July 31, what do you think the SysAdmins will look like in 2025? We want to hear about your experiences over the course of your time as a SysAdmin and in recent months, and your perception of how SysAdmins have been impacted. What do you think the SysAdmin role will look like in the future—will SysAdmins become “Tech Generalists?” Will responsibilities change? If so, how? What do you think the new SysAdmin “normal” will look like, and how should we think about preparing for these changes?  

Share your thoughts by July 29 and we’ll put 250 THWACKRegistered points in your account.

Parents
  • I agree with  and the blending of the positions. Adoption of the cloud (at least for my business) was a little slow due to the cost of it but little by little SaaS is making it's way into our world. If it wasn't for some home grown systems we wouldn't have much infrastructure on premise. We have already moved all networking to the cloud with Meraki which has let us manage 100+ sites with 2 network admins, and even that most of their time is on telecom systems not networking. If we could remove more systems and depend on the vendors to provide them for us I could see a few people with multiple hats having to do very little. There is still a lot of work to do to get there but if the last 5 years have been the proof of anything, you never know what could be around the corner.

Comment
  • I agree with  and the blending of the positions. Adoption of the cloud (at least for my business) was a little slow due to the cost of it but little by little SaaS is making it's way into our world. If it wasn't for some home grown systems we wouldn't have much infrastructure on premise. We have already moved all networking to the cloud with Meraki which has let us manage 100+ sites with 2 network admins, and even that most of their time is on telecom systems not networking. If we could remove more systems and depend on the vendors to provide them for us I could see a few people with multiple hats having to do very little. There is still a lot of work to do to get there but if the last 5 years have been the proof of anything, you never know what could be around the corner.

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