View Full Version : Systems Administrator position in Greeley
thedave1164
10-05-2009, 21:11
We are lookig for a systems administrator for a Windows/Cisco shop.
Windows 7
Server 2008R2
HP/UX
SAP
SCCM2007
MOSS2007
XP
2003
Cisco VOIP
HP/EMC SAN technologies
We are a highly distributed network, with 55 remote sites, and 100+ sales force around the country including HI, all run back to Greeley.
You will have to be willing to relocate to Greeley CO area, no relocation $ that I am aware of.
Privately held corporation, in the black with cash in the bank.
We have one employee that has been with the company since 1953, real deal WWII hero.
This company has never laid any one off, and only hires when there is work to be done.
Myself and the Sr Admin are responsible for over 45 different systems/technologies.
We are pretty leading edge, when and where it makes sense.
If you are interested PM me for email addy, will need resume and salary req.
I don't expect this to be open long.
theGinsue
10-05-2009, 21:49
Thanks for the heads up. I'll pass this info around my shop and see if anyone is interested.
What is the typical pay for a position like this one? I only ask because I am going to school for this very job.
thedave1164
10-06-2009, 04:48
What is the typical pay for a position like this one? I only ask because I am going to school for this very job.
the acronym DOE comes into play.
Schooling is one thing, experience is another. But really it varies from one extreme to another.
There are some salary surveys on sites like monster/dice/career builder.
But right out of school with 0 experience $9-15 hr helpdesk, and moving up to deskside support role, then to Jr Admin.
I have made $10 hr as a Service Manager, and $100K yr as a systems analyst and everything inbetween.
PS I do not make $100K now :(
Thanks that does help me get a better idea of what to expect.
theGinsue
10-06-2009, 18:11
Something a lot of folks who aren't in the industry fail to consider is that these same type of positions that require a government security clearance can help to increase the salary; more so the higher the clearance.
thedave1164
10-06-2009, 19:17
Something a lot of folks who aren't in the industry fail to consider is that these same type of positions that require a government security clearance can help to increase the salary; more so the higher the clearance.
Not so much now as it was.
I know a guy at L3 Communications that can get a clearance for someone with a clean record in 48 hours. That is an interim Secret.
Used to be you had to get it in the service and keep it active working for DOD contractor.
It still helps though, just not the deal breaker it used to be.
thedave1164
10-06-2009, 19:21
Thanks that does help me get a better idea of what to expect.
No problem.
I warn people to not get into IT right now, as it is saturated, and few really good jobs out there.
In 2002 I got laid off, along with about 10000 other it folks in Colorado, I was competing for helpdesk jobs with PhD's, no joke, lot's of MS types too.
Find a niche, and be willing to relocate for the best positions.
Worst part for me, is I like rural America, and IT jobs don't grow on farms.....
Doc, send me a PM, we sometimes bring on interns, located downtown Denver and have a nice cross-section of tech at work in the real world.
thedave1164
10-06-2009, 20:22
Doc, send me a PM, we sometimes bring on interns, located downtown Denver and have a nice cross-section of tech at work in the real world.
Forgot about internships, it is a good way to get real world experience while going to school.
What is an internship consist of?
No problem.
I warn people to not get into IT right now, as it is saturated, and few really good jobs out there.
In 2002 I got laid off, along with about 10000 other it folks in Colorado, I was competing for helpdesk jobs with PhD's, no joke, lot's of MS types too.
Find a niche, and be willing to relocate for the best positions.
Worst part for me, is I like rural America, and IT jobs don't grow on farms.....
What is MS types? Microsoft or Multiple Scleroses?
MichiganMilitia
10-07-2009, 01:31
If you can get into linux and dirty hands coding/top end web development (which is very hard to do) as a jack of all trades, you will never run out of work. Even if you try to scare it with 80-90 hour weeks. Ask me how I know [Beer]
I also heard that those guys spend their late nights guarding their favorite forums from auto insurance spammers...[Beer]
80 or 90 hours a week? Jesus, do you skip sleeping just to go shooting?
I have not seen a 40 hour work week since I was a teenager. In the last 10 years I can count then time when I was not available via email or cell just in case. As for hours, on the systems side you can expect to be in the office when your staff is and then to do all your heavy lifting outside of normal business hours. That means you will work nights and weekends because the business does not shut down so you can adjust routers, upgrade mail servers or roll out new platforms. If this is not the glamour you expected, best be careful what direction you go.
I seemed to be better at computers than I would like to admit and I'm tired of it. I am going to take a crack at it. I'm not in it for the fame, in fact I don't want to be known as the New Bill Gates ever.
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