74 year old white guy here... It was so interesting to watch your video. I didn’t get into the tech world until I was in my late 40’s. I ran into employment issues when the company I worked for went belly up and I couldn’t get anything close to the income I was used to. I had to take a help desk position and try to work myself into a better job from within a new company. I worked myself steadily into better and better positions until I retired at age 70. It’s daunting. It’s scary. But you and I know how rewarding it is to reach for the next level and the next and keep achieving that goal you thought might be too high for you. Your story seemed so much like mine it was almost like a flashback. I wish you the best in everything. Your family is blessed to have you as their example and leader.
@J F no idea, but it seems that color is everything today. Our friends of 20 odd years said they couldn’t associate with “people like us anymore” after the riots because we’re racist. If they believe that I would’ve thought they would have noticed years ago. She just randomly drove across the city to give back stuff we had given them and told my wife she would never associate with people like us again because some white person accused her son of stealing. Her son is a good kid and I don’t think he would do that, but she never asked us how we felt about it. Since then I’m very aware of color.
Karl, 45 year old latino here and I'm in the same position today that you were in back then. Reading this and listening to this guys story gives me hope. The mistake I made was thinking I could get some certificates and turn around and get hired as a network admin without any experience. I went and got my CCENT and my Security+ and then went looking for a job. What I should have done was get a job at a helpdesk and work on my certs like this guy. Now I'm working on getting my A+ as my third cert and looking for a helpdesk position, lol, so trying to take a short cut did not work for me. I did manage to get an interview for a security analyst position but having zero hands on experience with the tools of the trade tanked my chances. I thought that knowing what things like Splunk, Nmap, Nessus, Wireshark, Cain and Abel, etc. would be enough to have people give me an opportunity, but what I learned is that most jobs aren't interested in investing in an employee, they want someone they don't have to teach or train, they just want someone that can hit the ground running. It's understandable since it is a business and they are in it to make money not train employees, but trying to get into IT seems much different than trying to get any other job I've been interested in getting before. Anyways, both of your stories give me hope. I have an interview with a school for a technical support specialist role that I really want, I hope I get it!
@@CunningAndGuile Moises, being Latino should get you a great start on a Customer Support career if you speak Spanish. My wife has gone back to work because she’s bored. She is asked constantly if she can speak Spanish. Indeed is an excellent place to put out your resume’. She gets four to ten offers a week . Good luck in your search and your career.
@@davidsteckley8846 I did apply for a few state positions, but they take a really long time to do anything. It's been months and I still haven't heard anything from them. But yeah, state is a great place because of all the opportunity once you're in, they have a whole world of IT to learn and explore.
Brooo...I almost shed a tear when you said that you have two kids. Your two years ago is my right now. Thank you for thinking of us and making this video. I don't know who else needed to hear it, but certainly did.
Thank you for this supportive video! I'm a 43 year old wife and mother and I too was affected by the pandemic. I had to leave my career in restaurants after 23 years and started considering the IT field as my next journey. I looked into a tech school but couldnt afford the $35K for one year. So! ? I studied for the A+ all in my own! I got a help desk job after passing the 1001, four months later passed the 1002 and now considering my next move! Hungry for growth! The opportunities are out there and your video has encouraged me to KEEP LEARNING! Thank you!
The Help Desk is like the IT proving ground. Take the hazing, get your certs and get out! You will double your salary.. close to six figures without a college degree!!! When you finally become an admin, learn monitoring and A SCRIPTING LANGUAGE. This will set you head and shoulders above the rest.
I’m 20 got 2 years of help desk under my belt and currently working as a technical support specialist at a internet and cable company. You definitely opened my mind to what I can do. Thank you !
2 years at helpdesk jeez lol. I'm in 5 months and I'm already applying for next lol. Can't stand it lol. And there are people on my team doing it for 17 years lol. Fucking crazy. I work for a good company though so maybe that's why. It's still just a call center
I would say 2 years is not bad at all, especially if you have an industry or company your at that touches so many things, an example a casino. Second it all depends on the individual. I take a bit more time to pickup and learn as I am hands on repeat task. Bottom line is don’t judge people, sometimes the job is perfect for that season of life your in and sometimes the company is paying decent for the tech. I am going on 4 weeks and I have touched all kinds of devices from POS systems to Active Directory unlocking accounts…casinos a great avenues for cross training and troubleshooting many many devices.
God bless you for this video man. I’m a single dad in helpdesk and this motivated me to continue studying for my certs and not lose focus because it is possible to move up.
Dude! I very much appreciate this video. I've been with a company for 2 years as an IT Analyst and the best that, that company did for me was give me severe anxiety about stepping into my next role, ELSEWHERE. I know my stuff but the way the enterprise conducted things were absolutely abysmal. You've done more for me and my confidence in ten minutes than they have in 2 years! Thanks again.
Your experience brightened up my path , Ser! I'm in a point where i must choose to be the Systems Administrator or Network Administrator. 7 years as a NOC Monitoring but still in doubt of my skills. You destroyed my focus on those text messages BUT in that particular 5secs, I just can't! Why?! @ 7:01-7:06 of your video is encrypted! Seriously, thank you for sharing, Ser! You deserve this! I bet you're already the Senior Network Admin today. KUDOS!
As a guy with no IT experience other than gaming and building my own computers I landed an entry level service desk position at a hospital. No college degree or any certifications either. Feels good working in the health care industry as well. Only been working there for a few months but I love talking to people and learning along the way. In a nerdy way it is a pretty fun job. Looking forward to this career path.
@@meyonmastermind7497 I agree, lovely environment with a clear path on how to excel. During my breaks I will try to assist others in our Help Me Out chat or read up on our KBs. Passion is what drives success and I can feel it with this field of work.
Good stuff man! I've been in the IT world for two years too. As of now, I work as an IT Consultant (bascially helpdesk ticketing in a large office enviroment). I've held this job for a year thus far and its been a ride lol. The best part about the job is that we have a ton of projects that need to be done, everything from imaging multiple PCs at once, installing and moderating programs, installing servers etc.. But ever and since the pandemic struck, we've been doing it all from home. It's been an experience but I'm enjoying the ride now. I'm always egear to learn something new and expand my IT knowhow. Glad to see you out here doing the same, man. Keep up the good work!
This video got me pumped! Been in a IT Support position for only 7 months and just started getting mentored by the Network Admin at my job. Based on what he has been telling me, seems like I won't be in the Support position for much longer! Routing and switching is exactly what I'm being taught now. Hungry to learn the rest!
I understand about things being intimated. I started first Cybersecurity job a little after the pandemic. So, I am doing a lot of training from home. I'm doing stuff I've never done before, its harder to learn, when you physical train with someone. I thank God, I am also with a company, who understands too.
As a mom who works from home currently studying to transition into IT, this video was pretty ensuring. I failed the ITF+ by one question a couple weeks back, I took the ITF as a cert for myself to prove that yes I can start from ground 0 and work up. I want to get the A+, sec+ and network+ all this year if I can! See you at the top!
Just started my adventure into network admin degree. Always liked tech and could read or talk about tech for hours. Now I have classes that I can go on and on a about tech and everyone has interest. I'm excited to finish up my AA in network administration. I know my start will be at the bottom and I'm just excited to get in there and prove myself. Thank you for making this video. Felt real and honest about how you got to your position.
When you mentioned you had two kids I instantly subscribed. Will follow your journey my brother , I have two myself and start my first help desk role (tier 1) in a week. Best of luck to you
I also went from Help Desk to Network Administrator............Learn Cisco Network Administration in a Month of Lunches 1st Edition is a good book that helped me break down day to day operation.
Good shit! I've been in IT for 6 years in tech support, never took the initiative to level up or get certs, now thats changed, glad I found your channel.
I feel blessed to have stumbled upon your video man. I start my IT career at my new job in 2 weeks with little knowledge of network security while studying for my network+ exam. I’ll be starting as entry level help desk support & I needed to hear this. I hope that I can come back to this comment in the next few years and thank you again for the encouraging words. If you’re reading this and you are in the same position as me, I wish you the best in your future career! We got this🙏🏾
I certainly needed to see this video. I just registered for two classes to become a Microsoft System Administrator with no IT background. A friend of mine does this for a living and makes great money, I decided to go into the IT field and dhange careers about a year ago. wating this video and reading the comments lets me know that I am not alone and that can be done. Thanks for this.
Awesome video bro! Starterd out in desktop support 2 1/2 years ago and I just landed a roll as a Linux System Administrator! Feels goood! Anyone looking to get into IT, help desk is where it’s at!
I'm proud of you my brother I hope all continues to go well for you. I was a help desk associate for 10 years, I got laid off in February of this year due to the pandemic. I'm much older than you are so it is hard to find a new job. Keep up the good work my brother.
I’ve been working in IT for over 20yrs now. You are spot on with your information. Here’s the truth about Technology: You aren’t truly valuable to a company until you are able to demonstrate your abilities during a major system outage. I know it sounds crazy but imagine a company that brings in $2m per day and something happens where one of their main applications stop working but you have the knowledge to fix it. Once you go through a few of these experiences, that’s when you are valued. After watching your video, I can see that you have a bright future 👍🏾
I just got promoted as Network Admin from IT Assistant and will have training next week. When they announced it to me, I don't know how to feel honestly. My expertise is on technical problems and don't know much about network side. My colleague, IT manager and CEO assured me that I can do it and it's for my personal and career growth. I'm glad I found your video regarding this to prepare me for next week. Thank you for this video! :)
I just got qualified for funding to start my career in information technology security admin!!! Very inspiring and helpful!! Congratulations to your success and hopefully ill see you down the road!
I just applied for a LAN Admin position and I received an email requesting a phone interview. I watched this video to see what insider info I could get to help me with understanding the role. It was helpful and I'm hoping I can land the position.
I just got out the service and been putting off getting into the IT field for years. I have zero experience and knowledge so its a tough long hill to climb. Thanks for your content
I like your videos because you cover your IT journey and go over the certificates you acquired rather than just saying "oh I went from help desk to scrum master in 3 months because I quit my previous jobs".
Great video! I just landed my fist IT job half a month ago and boy do I feel like a deer in the headlights! We were going into the office 3 times a week but then got hit with a few covid cases and now fully remote. It just add another another level of difficulty. But like you said, just gotta put in the extra time to learn the stuff. Here I am Saturday night looking at helpdesk and troubleshooting videos.
Thank you for sharing your story as I found it to be quite inspirational. Congratulations and I am about to make a transition in my IT career. I feel your story is proof that anything is possible if one puts in the effort and time. Much respect and thank you once again for sharing.
congradulations bro you are a wise man. many of us back in the day did not know we did not need the CS degree which is a lot harder than it needs to be. dont get me wrong its a good degree because the professors are horrible and the assignments and labs you will have to learn how to figure things out on your own but you have saved yourself a huge amount of debt and made a decent living while you worked your way up. congradulations on not taking the broad road that many take.
I'm in the exact same boat, interned for 6 months doing tech support assistance, then got hired on full time doing help desk ticket calls. Now I am working on getting certs. Hoping to get into NOC. Also, I have the exact same shirt you are wearing lol
Sounds like you figured it out, man. Congrats! I am HD supervisor but they keep piling shit on my plate and stuff is going to get dropped. I'm working on my CCNA and I might bow out if I can't offload some of these tasks to my underlings. Unfortunately my senior tech is pretty incompetent lol. I'M GETTING AN ULCER OVAH HERE! Fuggedaboutit... lol
Been doing Help Desk for 8 years now. I should have jumped on my certs a long time ago. I don't know anything about networking so I am starting with the fundamentals. I am studying for my Network+. After that, I am going to go for my CCNA.
Yeah, I'm almost two years into my IT support role and am looking to advance into the networking/sysadmin route. Doing my Net+ now because jumping straight into CCNA without any fundamentals is setting up myself to fail the CCNA. I want to pass it the first try!
I appreciate you taking the time to share your IT journey in such a concise, digestible manner! I possess no experience but I’ve gained an interest in IT and recently applied for a Help Desk position. I hope to follow in your footsteps and land an administrative role. Apart from applying and gaining experience in a Help Desk position, everything else is still somewhat hazy with regards to certification and the types of admin roles out there. Thank you again for the video and I‘m looking forward to more content. Congratulations on the admin position and best of wishes!
25 years old here. About to finish a course about networking (something more general that opens up quite a lot of opportunities) and today I already got 3 calls from different companies who have interest in me working for them (got 3 interviews coming up). Ive realized probably the very first job I will ever face in the field will be Help Desk, and I know it can open up doors to more and more positions that aren't quite connected to HD. With that been said, I think choosing an actual company to work for could be as benefital as choosing a position to work in. Most companies would rather someone that is already working with their systems to climb higher into new fields than others who just finished studying but haven't really put their hands on the field yet. What you said here was very inspiring and im not afraid to go into this world right now of networking and im ready to face challenges head on. Thank you and have a nice week man!
@@TheBuffNerd7539 Hey, I got accepted into one job :) It's the one I think I can benefit the most of it in terms of growth in the company and overall experience. Thank you so much man :) I will be sure to check out for more content because it really does help!
Pumped with this guy! So basically I have got an interview for Junior Middleware Administrator position, went to the second interview, waiting the third one, told me to learn about DNS and Web Servers! Almost learned about these two concepts! Wish me luck guys, and if you got any tips or so on I am here to listen carefully as well! And if somebody can rate this position, give an opinion and give me more insights I am going to be really thankful folks! Best regards from Bulgaria guys!
Glad to hear you made your dreams come true it is hard to progress your education while raising a family for sure but I hope I can replicate your story one day great inspiration
I went from boots-on-ground labor-intensive entry-level field tech to network operations engineer in 8 months without having to go to school. God is good.
I have just passed CompiA++ network and Security!! Am currently working as a tech support/ customer service and can’t wait to transition!! Am thinking of studying CCNA !!Thanks for the video!!
I am you 2 years before you made this video, my wife and I are expecting a baby, I am working with something not exactly related to IT and I've been having a hard time working 12 hours a day, keeping up with school and studying to get into IT (cause school teaches me whatever they have to, which means not straight to the point sometimes). Google and UA-cam teach me whatever I want and straight to the point. So basically three sources of attention that I have to manage. I believe I just need to come out with a plan and go through it rn.
Great video, I followed a similar path did 3 semester of computer support the. Took a job in drafting. IT manager quit and thrown to the wolves. Worked out well still there 3 years later.
Appreciate you brother 🙏🏾 🙏🏾 for this knowledge and encouragement, and I don’t know you, but I’m proud of you! And you’re right, keep striving and working at it, and success will basically meet us half way. God bless you and your family! I liked and subscribed.
I'm happy I found you today brother. I have always been into tech and just wanted to see if I could get somewhere. If you every have time for alive session to answer question I'm down.
Also just curious,Before you became a network admin, did you ever build a home lab or did you practice labs hands with equipment before becoming a network admin?
Yes absolutely, While I was an intern and also on the helpdesk, I would shadow the engineers and score lab equipment from them that they were no longer using. I also Brought a few switches on ebay (very cheap). While studying for the CCNA I used my home lab equipment in order to practice configurations.
Keep pushing! Being technically proficient is one thing but you also have to be sure to practice your soft skills. Communicating effectively is what helped me seal the deal for the Admin role I am currently in.
Dude this video is outstanding and very helpful. I like what you said regarding your team and how they helped you out, there is always something that we may not know in IT and its a great thing when others are willing to help. I recently got let go because the IT guys were not being very helpful with me at my new job.
I’m trying to change careers. Want to get into IT. But I know nada! Starting studying for my a+ cert. a little nervous about this transition as It’s all new to me.
I totally understand, I was exactly the same getting out of the military in a totally different field. Just make sure you stay fired up, optimistic, and do your best to set yourself apart. Build a PC in your free time, get comfortable maneuvering in the command line. It's ok to be nervous, just make sure you don't quit. :)
This is a good video this is been expiring I'm a 25 years old man planning to go back to school for I.T. assistant and work my way up to a network administrator . I want to get my I.T. certificates and my certifications.
I became a network admin last week lol. I worked for Helpdesk for two years I do have just an associate degree in information technology , no certs. But yea lol.
Just to start thanks for doing this video. Being unnerved by new situations has frequently gotten in the way of feeling totally confident. I have a couple of years as a tech, but have never worked directly in an IT Department. It was usually in another sector of the institution and I was on the end user side. I was allowed to fix whatever I could before escalating directly to the IT person. Now, I am looking to study more IT fields and learn as much as I can, since one of my previous coworkers said I would do better and earn more money if I was an IT person. It is nice to hear that it only took you a couple of years to get into an admin position. That itself is impressive! And for what it is worth working from home isn't easy for me either. I am working a side-job and taking classes to learn more. My next goal is to learn as much PYTHON as I can. I will leave it all at that and thanks again for sharing your story.
Hello, unlike what you said, one thing that you still get as a network/system admin, is tickets (Incidents). But these are usually related to the infrastructure unlike L1 help desk support that will most likely deal with end users directly. But yes sure network/system admins will be part of the change requests/projets unlike help desk techs usually that is correct.
I guess it was just that particular job I had at the time. But your right we still got tickets here and there but what was more important was all of the projects.
I have been doing help desk (tier 1 and tier 2) work for 16 years and I am ready to get into the same thing. I need to see how I can transistion at almost 40
@@TheBuffNerd7539 yeah bro, Cyber security would be great. I see all those jobs that are out there required years of experience. I benefit from group collaboration and schooling
I took an internship in March this year at the HelpDesk. In May was hired on at the company and I want to learn more! I want to be a System Admin, and more. Your story is inspiring!
Helpdesk opens a lot of opportunities in the tech field. Be willing to learn and have a goal in mind. I went from Help Desk to System Administrator in 4 years for the company i'm currently working for. Before i landed the help desk role, i was just a guy who liked to mess with and build computers. Now i made a career out of it.
Did you have a degree or any certs, Before getting the help desk role? Im planning to get the three comptia certs instead of a degree would this be ok for me to do?
I am currently in a senior Helpdesk role in a banking environment.... it is very hard and competitive to get a role as Sys/Network admin in that kind of environment. Starting from zero, it won’t take 2 years in that kind of environment
You may need to branch out a bitt. If you have the credentials you should be able to catch the attention of different environments. Bet on yourself! :D
Being an ex Army guy I think of Help Desk as being in the trenches...taking the grenades and bullets...lol. In other words you are the first point of contact when people call or bring their messed up laptop in. Either you can fix it on the spot or create a ticket and escalate it to someone who can. It does not mean you CAN'T fix it, its just not your role and things run smoother when we stay in our lane. Now I'm a Computer Support Analyst which is a fancy term for Desktop Support. I know it sounds the same as HelpDesk, but they are different. Desktop Support is the guy/girl who get that ticket the the HelpDesk person wrote. Desktop support generally does ALL their work from tickets while Helpdesk either fixes stuff on the spot or escalates it to Desktop support
Great Video!! I had a Desktop Support job but was laid off due to the pandemic.. I have my CCNA 200-301, based in Houston, but it’s been so hard to even get an entry level network admin/engineer job... one network admin job posting had more than 700 applicants.. Crazy Times!!
the perfect counter to socialism is hard working men and women that want to work are humble , willing to learn and have a team of people who understand its worth the time to invest the time and energy helping young people unlock their talents and abilities that will gaurantee a never ending prosperity and no economic down turns.
thanks dude.. inspiring story. i myself going from desktop support tech to "one day" developer (web development). I want to get away from support in IT, but coding really interests me on how web apps function. solving problems like that since the web has become our 2nd lives and something businesses rely on nowadays. its ever so changing every year and can always grow never stagnant - that's the kind of job i am passionate for. doing desktop support is so repetitive and dead end job.. development is highly lucrative.
First of all good video, second good advice. Yes, this is possible. Everyone that's brand new usually starts in helpdesk than moves over into network admin or system admin role. If you put in the time, effort, dedication than you can definitely move into high level role after a year in IT. You also need to learn how to market yourself in the job market. Also focus on certifications, your resume and interview skills. When I first started IT, I went for my A+. I started at 9 dollars an hour and jumped to 22 dollars an hour in just over a year. After a year making 22 an hour, I jumped again into 35 an hour. You really need to be aggressive in the job market if you want to move into a different position. You either get promoted in the company or you promote yourself by moving into a different role in another company. Being in IT for over 6 years, my advice for you is not to get stuck in helpdesk or a position that you have no room to grow. Hopefully my advice helps a new person in IT.
@@akosuakris took about a year. I doubled my salary back to back every year. I live in New York. Better position and better opportunity. I never left my state.
@@KevtechITSupport New York is to expensive for my pockets. The housing is very high. But the jobs are plenty over there. So maybe I'll have a second look
@@akosuakris you can make a good salary here. You just have to learn how to market yourself. It's all about your confidence and having the ability to answer the questions. Obviously you need a solid resume and also work on your interview skills. If its too expensive in NY than live with other people so you can afford it.
Congratulations man. I'm still trying to figure out exactly what I want to do in IT. I'm on my last semester of my Bachelor's degree in IT and I don't have any real work experience in I.T. I've landed multiple interviews but haven't been hired and I'm thinking it's for multiple reasons which was my availability, lack of experience, and no certifications. Right now I'm taking 6 online courses while trying to get some entry level experience in the field.
You can do it! Keep trying to break down that door. Alot of people I know who got degrees still have to break into the industry via the infamous "helpdesk". Go for those type of roles. I am sure you will land something soon!.
Great vid I’m also studying CCNA and lab a couple days a week and also built my own internal network. I’m looking for those types of roles, I started IT in 2018 and passed A+ Net+. My ultimate goal is becoming network engineer/ admin and I’m currently at the helpdesk!!!
TheBuffNerd I used everything I could from A+ with the helpdesk. Did job shadowing with desktop crew from 6 months and A+ and Net+ helped out a lot. I also did job shadowing with the infrastructure team for 4 months building switches and upgrading the network. Network+ and CCNA was very useful with that. I got a year in with this company and now it’s time for me to branch looking for Networking jobs. Those 30 -50 calls get old REAL quick!!!
I had trouble looking for an engineering job that pays well and only managed to get job offers for helpdesk support .. I feel like it's a dead end if I don't chase for the network engineer/admin path
Bruhhh... I just got thrown into a SysAdmin+NetAdmin hybrid promotion with no team. Just lucky my old boss still loves me enough to mentor. When you said stress, I felt that.
I'm about to start my journey. I bought a few courses & a book to study and do labs for my CCNA. Help desk looks like the foot in the door to gain experience. So, hopefully I can land a job after a few months of studying for my CCNA.
74 year old white guy here... It was so interesting to watch your video. I didn’t get into the tech world until I was in my late 40’s. I ran into employment issues when the company I worked for went belly up and I couldn’t get anything close to the income I was used to. I had to take a help desk position and try to work myself into a better job from within a new company. I worked myself steadily into better and better positions until I retired at age 70. It’s daunting. It’s scary. But you and I know how rewarding it is to reach for the next level and the next and keep achieving that goal you thought might be too high for you. Your story seemed so much like mine it was almost like a flashback. I wish you the best in everything. Your family is blessed to have you as their example and leader.
@J F no idea, but it seems that color is everything today. Our friends of 20 odd years said they couldn’t associate with “people like us anymore” after the riots because we’re racist. If they believe that I would’ve thought they would have noticed years ago. She just randomly drove across the city to give back stuff we had given them and told my wife she would never associate with people like us again because some white person accused her son of stealing. Her son is a good kid and I don’t think he would do that, but she never asked us how we felt about it. Since then I’m very aware of color.
Karl, 45 year old latino here and I'm in the same position today that you were in back then. Reading this and listening to this guys story gives me hope. The mistake I made was thinking I could get some certificates and turn around and get hired as a network admin without any experience. I went and got my CCENT and my Security+ and then went looking for a job. What I should have done was get a job at a helpdesk and work on my certs like this guy. Now I'm working on getting my A+ as my third cert and looking for a helpdesk position, lol, so trying to take a short cut did not work for me. I did manage to get an interview for a security analyst position but having zero hands on experience with the tools of the trade tanked my chances. I thought that knowing what things like Splunk, Nmap, Nessus, Wireshark, Cain and Abel, etc. would be enough to have people give me an opportunity, but what I learned is that most jobs aren't interested in investing in an employee, they want someone they don't have to teach or train, they just want someone that can hit the ground running. It's understandable since it is a business and they are in it to make money not train employees, but trying to get into IT seems much different than trying to get any other job I've been interested in getting before. Anyways, both of your stories give me hope. I have an interview with a school for a technical support specialist role that I really want, I hope I get it!
@@CunningAndGuile Moises, being Latino should get you a great start on a Customer Support career if you speak Spanish. My wife has gone back to work because she’s bored. She is asked constantly if she can speak Spanish. Indeed is an excellent place to put out your resume’. She gets four to ten offers a week . Good luck in your search and your career.
@@CunningAndGuile look into getting a state job in IT
@@davidsteckley8846 I did apply for a few state positions, but they take a really long time to do anything. It's been months and I still haven't heard anything from them. But yeah, state is a great place because of all the opportunity once you're in, they have a whole world of IT to learn and explore.
Successful people have fear, successful people have doubts, and successful people have worries. They just don't let these feelings stop them.
Agree
Brooo...I almost shed a tear when you said that you have two kids. Your two years ago is my right now. Thank you for thinking of us and making this video. I don't know who else needed to hear it, but certainly did.
Just doing my best to give back and help those that can relate. I truly appreciate your support! :)
Thank you for this supportive video! I'm a 43 year old wife and mother and I too was affected by the pandemic. I had to leave my career in restaurants after 23 years and started considering the IT field as my next journey. I looked into a tech school but couldnt afford the $35K for one year. So! ? I studied for the A+ all in my own! I got a help desk job after passing the 1001, four months later passed the 1002 and now considering my next move! Hungry for growth! The opportunities are out there and your video has encouraged me to KEEP LEARNING! Thank you!
Good luck and keep us updated
The Help Desk is like the IT proving ground. Take the hazing, get your certs and get out! You will double your salary.. close to six figures without a college degree!!!
When you finally become an admin, learn monitoring and A SCRIPTING LANGUAGE. This will set you head and shoulders above the rest.
Couldn't have said it better myself.
@Root Capable IT professionals don't need a degree.
Which scripting language would you recommend to learn first?
@@cosmopayne If you are in a windows environment, Powershell is a must but Python is great too. In a Linux environment , Bash .
@unkentainable in my experience, the self-taught
o degree guys are able to think outside of the box more so than the college grads.
I’m 20 got 2 years of help desk under my belt and currently working as a technical support specialist at a internet and cable company. You definitely opened my mind to what I can do. Thank you !
2 years at helpdesk jeez lol. I'm in 5 months and I'm already applying for next lol. Can't stand it lol. And there are people on my team doing it for 17 years lol. Fucking crazy. I work for a good company though so maybe that's why. It's still just a call center
@@tommy2346 5 months of helpdesk? stay humble, you still don"t know anything lol
@@BitcoinBulgaria1992 whatever man. I got my CCNA and I'm out lol.
I would say 2 years is not bad at all, especially if you have an industry or company your at that touches so many things, an example a casino. Second it all depends on the individual. I take a bit more time to pickup and learn as I am hands on repeat task. Bottom line is don’t judge people, sometimes the job is perfect for that season of life your in and sometimes the company is paying decent for the tech. I am going on 4 weeks and I have touched all kinds of devices from POS systems to Active Directory unlocking accounts…casinos a great avenues for cross training and troubleshooting many many devices.
@@bertmeza8673 that’s awesome man keep on grinding and more opportunities will arise, you got it watch!
God bless you for this video man. I’m a single dad in helpdesk and this motivated me to continue studying for my certs and not lose focus because it is possible to move up.
Awesome video, 6 months help desk > 1 year support engineer > 2 years currently as a Cloud Sys Engineer. Now i'm looking to grow further.
That’s amazing growth! You should do videos talking about your experience
Where are you now bro
Dude! I very much appreciate this video. I've been with a company for 2 years as an IT Analyst and the best that, that company did for me was give me severe anxiety about stepping into my next role, ELSEWHERE. I know my stuff but the way the enterprise conducted things were absolutely abysmal. You've done more for me and my confidence in ten minutes than they have in 2 years! Thanks again.
Its messages like this that keep me going man! Glad I can help! Go for what you want man! Don't let anyone steer you away! All the power to you!
@@TheBuffNerd7539 Many thanks, my friend! Cheers to your and our continued success.
Your experience brightened up my path , Ser! I'm in a point where i must choose to be the Systems Administrator or Network Administrator. 7 years as a NOC Monitoring but still in doubt of my skills. You destroyed my focus on those text messages BUT in that particular 5secs, I just can't! Why?! @ 7:01-7:06 of your video is encrypted! Seriously, thank you for sharing, Ser! You deserve this! I bet you're already the Senior Network Admin today. KUDOS!
As a guy with no IT experience other than gaming and building my own computers I landed an entry level service desk position at a hospital. No college degree or any certifications either. Feels good working in the health care industry as well. Only been working there for a few months but I love talking to people and learning along the way. In a nerdy way it is a pretty fun job. Looking forward to this career path.
How much they paying you?
@@Stoneface_ $18 an hour during the week
$18.50 on weekends
@@Kilroy098 that’s a great path.
@@meyonmastermind7497 I agree, lovely environment with a clear path on how to excel. During my breaks I will try to assist others in our Help Me Out chat or read up on our KBs. Passion is what drives success and I can feel it with this field of work.
Good stuff man! I've been in the IT world for two years too. As of now, I work as an IT Consultant (bascially helpdesk ticketing in a large office enviroment). I've held this job for a year thus far and its been a ride lol. The best part about the job is that we have a ton of projects that need to be done, everything from imaging multiple PCs at once, installing and moderating programs, installing servers etc.. But ever and since the pandemic struck, we've been doing it all from home. It's been an experience but I'm enjoying the ride now. I'm always egear to learn something new and expand my IT knowhow. Glad to see you out here doing the same, man. Keep up the good work!
Thanks Sir! All the power to you! keep grinding it out!
I really appreciate your update; very informative. Keep it up! I'm middle aged, and just about to take the first baby steps.
This video got me pumped! Been in a IT Support position for only 7 months and just started getting mentored by the Network Admin at my job. Based on what he has been telling me, seems like I won't be in the Support position for much longer!
Routing and switching is exactly what I'm being taught now. Hungry to learn the rest!
I understand about things being intimated. I started first Cybersecurity job a little after the pandemic. So, I am doing a lot of training from home. I'm doing stuff I've never done before, its harder to learn, when you physical train with someone. I thank God, I am also with a company, who understands too.
That learning curve has definitely been harder to navigate. The fight is never over lol we gotta keep climbing!
Which pandemic? The swine flu? Ebola?
Can you let us know what training you’re taking?
@@looweegee252 the plandemic
Just passed my CCNA and am excited to get started in this field.
Any update?
As a mom who works from home currently studying to transition into IT, this video was pretty ensuring. I failed the ITF+ by one question a couple weeks back, I took the ITF as a cert for myself to prove that yes I can start from ground 0 and work up. I want to get the A+, sec+ and network+ all this year if I can! See you at the top!
Just started my adventure into network admin degree. Always liked tech and could read or talk about tech for hours. Now I have classes that I can go on and on a about tech and everyone has interest. I'm excited to finish up my AA in network administration. I know my start will be at the bottom and I'm just excited to get in there and prove myself. Thank you for making this video. Felt real and honest about how you got to your position.
2 years and your a administrator... What a great way to discount the real skill it takes to actually perform these tasks.
What can I say. Proficiency sells. For some more than others.
When you mentioned you had two kids I instantly subscribed. Will follow your journey my brother , I have two myself and start my first help desk role (tier 1) in a week. Best of luck to you
I also went from Help Desk to Network Administrator............Learn Cisco Network Administration in a Month of Lunches 1st Edition is a good book that helped me break down day to day operation.
Good shit! I've been in IT for 6 years in tech support, never took the initiative to level up or get certs, now thats changed, glad I found your channel.
I’m glad I can help! Motivating others is the reason I make content! Good luck!
@@TheBuffNerd7539 thanks dude, back at you with CCNP!
I felt too. That because we fear to out of comfort place
Wow 6 years is a mighty long time, glad you’ve jumped.
I feel blessed to have stumbled upon your video man. I start my IT career at my new job in 2 weeks with little knowledge of network security while studying for my network+ exam. I’ll be starting as entry level help desk support & I needed to hear this. I hope that I can come back to this comment in the next few years and thank you again for the encouraging words. If you’re reading this and you are in the same position as me, I wish you the best in your future career! We got this🙏🏾
I certainly needed to see this video. I just registered for two classes to become a Microsoft System Administrator with no IT background. A friend of mine does this for a living and makes great money, I decided to go into the IT field and dhange careers about a year ago. wating this video and reading the comments lets me know that I am not alone and that can be done. Thanks for this.
I am glad you enjoy the content! Grind it out and stay fired up!
Where can I sign up for those classes ?
Congratulations to all of your successes! I wish you all the best in life!
Push more content man! You have a great style for this platform
Awesome video bro! Starterd out in desktop support 2 1/2 years ago and I just landed a roll as a Linux System Administrator! Feels goood! Anyone looking to get into IT, help desk is where it’s at!
Any update?
I'm proud of you my brother I hope all continues to go well for you. I was a help desk associate for 10 years, I got laid off in February of this year due to the pandemic. I'm much older than you are so it is hard to find a new job. Keep up the good work my brother.
That's dedication! I heard age could cause issues when it comes to finding employment but I am sure you can persevere. Never Quit!
I’ve been working in IT for over 20yrs now. You are spot on with your information. Here’s the truth about Technology: You aren’t truly valuable to a company until you are able to demonstrate your abilities during a major system outage. I know it sounds crazy but imagine a company that brings in $2m per day and something happens where one of their main applications stop working but you have the knowledge to fix it. Once you go through a few of these experiences, that’s when you are valued. After watching your video, I can see that you have a bright future 👍🏾
I just got promoted as Network Admin from IT Assistant and will have training next week. When they announced it to me, I don't know how to feel honestly. My expertise is on technical problems and don't know much about network side. My colleague, IT manager and CEO assured me that I can do it and it's for my personal and career growth. I'm glad I found your video regarding this to prepare me for next week. Thank you for this video! :)
Congrats bro. Take small step. I was such situation
Thank you so much, seeing people like you come here on yt to help others gives me hope for humanity ❤
I just got qualified for funding to start my career in information technology security admin!!!
Very inspiring and helpful!! Congratulations to your success and hopefully ill see you down the road!
Congrats! Your about to do some big thing! All the power to you!
I just applied for a LAN Admin position and I received an email requesting a phone interview. I watched this video to see what insider info I could get to help me with understanding the role. It was helpful and I'm hoping I can land the position.
I just got out the service and been putting off getting into the IT field for years. I have zero experience and knowledge so its a tough long hill to climb. Thanks for your content
Started watching your vids again man but religiously this time, thanks for the motivation
Glad your channel popped up on my feed fam! Salute playa blessings and peace looking forward to more content
I appreciate that brotha! All the positive vibes your way!
Stay tuned!
Thanks for Sharing your story very relatable , but Optimism and critical thinking is key ,along with much coffee .
So true!
Just started as an Technical support analyst 🎉
17 and I find myself looking for certs to break into the field, this video was motivational.
“Keep your eyes on the prize.”
YES SIR! 👀👀👀 on the PRIZE!
I like your videos because you cover your IT journey and go over the certificates you acquired rather than just saying "oh I went from help desk to scrum master in 3 months because I quit my previous jobs".
Great video! I just landed my fist IT job half a month ago and boy do I feel like a deer in the headlights! We were going into the office 3 times a week but then got hit with a few covid cases and now fully remote. It just add another another level of difficulty. But like you said, just gotta put in the extra time to learn the stuff. Here I am Saturday night looking at helpdesk and troubleshooting videos.
💯💯💯
Gotta pay the cost to be the boss! Keep grinding. It will all make you a better IT Professional.
get it brah hats off to you....! Our paths are very similar and it all comes down to drive and your "WHY" ! Keep it up!
Thank you for sharing your story as I found it to be quite inspirational. Congratulations and I am about to make a transition in my IT career. I feel your story is proof that anything is possible if one puts in the effort and time. Much respect and thank you once again for sharing.
You are so welcome! I'm rooting for you! Best of luck!
congradulations bro you are a wise man. many of us back in the day did not know we did not need the CS degree which is a lot harder than it needs to be. dont get me wrong its a good degree because the professors are horrible and the assignments and labs you will have to learn how to figure things out on your own but you have saved yourself a huge amount of debt and made a decent living while you worked your way up. congradulations on not taking the broad road that many take.
Wonderful video, very informative . Appreciate your advice to help others grow. Keep it up!!
Loved your video and insight that you give. I myself just started my IT career and its very encouraging to hear someone you can relate to.
I'm in the exact same boat, interned for 6 months doing tech support assistance, then got hired on full time doing help desk ticket calls. Now I am working on getting certs. Hoping to get into NOC. Also, I have the exact same shirt you are wearing lol
NICE!!!! Great minds think alike!!!
This amazing and encouraging. Thanks for sharing your path. There are so many ways to make your IT career dreams come true.
Good video, the best way to learn is to play and break. IE, build a small home lab from older equipments and build play learn break fix..
Your pretty down to earth Nerd! Thanks for the wonderful video and your experiences of climbing up the ladder
Thanks so much!
Sounds like you figured it out, man. Congrats! I am HD supervisor but they keep piling shit on my plate and stuff is going to get dropped. I'm working on my CCNA and I might bow out if I can't offload some of these tasks to my underlings. Unfortunately my senior tech is pretty incompetent lol. I'M GETTING AN ULCER OVAH HERE! Fuggedaboutit... lol
Been doing Help Desk for 8 years now. I should have jumped on my certs a long time ago. I don't know anything about networking so I am starting with the fundamentals. I am studying for my Network+. After that, I am going to go for my CCNA.
Sounds good. understanding the fundamentals is the most important thing!
Yeah, I'm almost two years into my IT support role and am looking to advance into the networking/sysadmin route. Doing my Net+ now because jumping straight into CCNA without any fundamentals is setting up myself to fail the CCNA. I want to pass it the first try!
I appreciate you taking the time to share your IT journey in such a concise, digestible manner! I possess no experience but I’ve gained an interest in IT and recently applied for a Help Desk position. I hope to follow in your footsteps and land an administrative role.
Apart from applying and gaining experience in a Help Desk position, everything else is still somewhat hazy with regards to certification and the types of admin roles out there.
Thank you again for the video and I‘m looking forward to more content. Congratulations on the admin position and best of wishes!
Thanks so much!
I’m sure if you are enthusiastic, always willing to learn, and proactive! You’ll become an admin in no time!
25 years old here. About to finish a course about networking (something more general that opens up quite a lot of opportunities) and today I already got 3 calls from different companies who have interest in me working for them (got 3 interviews coming up). Ive realized probably the very first job I will ever face in the field will be Help Desk, and I know it can open up doors to more and more positions that aren't quite connected to HD. With that been said, I think choosing an actual company to work for could be as benefital as choosing a position to work in. Most companies would rather someone that is already working with their systems to climb higher into new fields than others who just finished studying but haven't really put their hands on the field yet. What you said here was very inspiring and im not afraid to go into this world right now of networking and im ready to face challenges head on. Thank you and have a nice week man!
I am glad you enjoyed the content! Keep grinding man! Let me know how those interviews went!
@@TheBuffNerd7539 Hey, I got accepted into one job :) It's the one I think I can benefit the most of it in terms of growth in the company and overall experience. Thank you so much man :) I will be sure to check out for more content because it really does help!
Pumped with this guy!
So basically I have got an interview for Junior Middleware Administrator position, went to the second interview, waiting the third one, told me to learn about DNS and Web Servers!
Almost learned about these two concepts!
Wish me luck guys, and if you got any tips or so on I am here to listen carefully as well!
And if somebody can rate this position, give an opinion and give me more insights I am going to be really thankful folks!
Best regards from Bulgaria guys!
Glad to hear you made your dreams come true it is hard to progress your education while raising a family for sure but I hope I can replicate your story one day great inspiration
You can do it! Keep grinding it out!
I went from boots-on-ground labor-intensive entry-level field tech to network operations engineer in 8 months without having to go to school. God is good.
May Allah guide you .you motivated most people.
Glad to help! I'll do my best to keep at it :)
I have just passed CompiA++ network and Security!! Am currently working as a tech support/ customer service and can’t wait to transition!! Am thinking of studying CCNA !!Thanks for the video!!
Of course, anything to help!
I am you 2 years before you made this video, my wife and I are expecting a baby, I am working with something not exactly related to IT and I've been having a hard time working 12 hours a day, keeping up with school and studying to get into IT (cause school teaches me whatever they have to, which means not straight to the point sometimes). Google and UA-cam teach me whatever I want and straight to the point.
So basically three sources of attention that I have to manage. I believe I just need to come out with a plan and go through it rn.
Yes sir! It's rough! Gear towards it the best way you can! Im rooting for ya!
Great video, I followed a similar path did 3 semester of computer support the. Took a job in drafting. IT manager quit and thrown to the wolves. Worked out well still there 3 years later.
That is awesome! Thanks for sharing!
Worked for 2 years in Helpdesk now going to move in Exchange administration role
Congrats! Good luck on your future endeavors.
Appreciate you brother 🙏🏾 🙏🏾 for this knowledge and encouragement, and I don’t know you, but I’m proud of you! And you’re right, keep striving and working at it, and success will basically meet us half way. God bless you and your family! I liked and subscribed.
I'm happy I found you today brother. I have always been into tech and just wanted to see if I could get somewhere. If you every have time for alive session to answer question I'm down.
I appreciate that! I'll work on doing that.
Thanks for the information. Appreciate you, man!
Respect bro. Nice to see another brother in tech. Can relate to your journey. Keep it going! Up and up.
Also just curious,Before you became a network admin, did you ever build a home lab or did you practice labs hands with equipment before becoming a network admin?
Yes absolutely, While I was an intern and also on the helpdesk, I would shadow the engineers and score lab equipment from them that they were no longer using. I also Brought a few switches on ebay (very cheap). While studying for the CCNA I used my home lab equipment in order to practice configurations.
Great video. I'm on the help desk now trying to transition
Keep pushing! Being technically proficient is one thing but you also have to be sure to practice your soft skills. Communicating effectively is what helped me seal the deal for the Admin role I am currently in.
Dude this video is outstanding and very helpful. I like what you said regarding your team and how they helped you out, there is always something that we may not know in IT and its a great thing when others are willing to help. I recently got let go because the IT guys were not being very helpful with me at my new job.
Hi bro,
I’m just about getting into IT industry ~ Network Administrator to be precise. Thanks for sharing this video.
Glad it was helpful!
Salute to you good sir! 💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾
💪💪💪 Same back to you Moe!
I’m trying to change careers. Want to get into IT. But I know nada! Starting studying for my a+ cert. a little nervous about this transition as It’s all new to me.
I totally understand, I was exactly the same getting out of the military in a totally different field. Just make sure you stay fired up, optimistic, and do your best to set yourself apart. Build a PC in your free time, get comfortable maneuvering in the command line. It's ok to be nervous, just make sure you don't quit. :)
This is a good video this is been expiring I'm a 25 years old man planning to go back to school for I.T. assistant and work my way up to a network administrator . I want to get my I.T. certificates and my certifications.
Nice! Stay motivated Keyon! I'm sure you will do some amazing things in the future!
Good video man! This felt genuine, so keep pushing the content.
Thanks! Will do!
I became a network admin last week lol. I worked for Helpdesk for two years I do have just an associate degree in information technology , no certs. But yea lol.
Loved this video
Glad you enjoy the content!
Just to start thanks for doing this video. Being unnerved by new situations has frequently gotten in the way of feeling totally confident. I have a couple of years as a tech, but have never worked directly in an IT Department. It was usually in another sector of the institution and I was on the end user side. I was allowed to fix whatever I could before escalating directly to the IT person. Now, I am looking to study more IT fields and learn as much as I can, since one of my previous coworkers said I would do better and earn more money if I was an IT person. It is nice to hear that it only took you a couple of years to get into an admin position. That itself is impressive! And for what it is worth working from home isn't easy for me either. I am working a side-job and taking classes to learn more. My next goal is to learn as much PYTHON as I can. I will leave it all at that and thanks again for sharing your story.
Anything I can do to help! Python is the way to go! Stay motivated!
Great video bro. Like this type of content. Its honest and relatable us new comers need more of your vids. Thank you
More to come! Glad you enjoy the content!
Hello, unlike what you said, one thing that you still get as a network/system admin, is tickets (Incidents). But these are usually related to the infrastructure unlike L1 help desk support that will most likely deal with end users directly. But yes sure network/system admins will be part of the change requests/projets unlike help desk techs usually that is correct.
I guess it was just that particular job I had at the time. But your right we still got tickets here and there but what was more important was all of the projects.
I have been doing help desk (tier 1 and tier 2) work for 16 years and I am ready to get into the same thing. I need to see how I can transistion at almost 40
Age will not hold you back! As long as you have the drive and work ethic, you should do fine! Are you thinking of going to network engineer route?
@@TheBuffNerd7539 yeah bro, Cyber security would be great. I see all those jobs that are out there required years of experience. I benefit from group collaboration and schooling
Love this video bro. SOLID!
I took an internship in March this year at the HelpDesk. In May was hired on at the company and I want to learn more! I want to be a System Admin, and more. Your story is inspiring!
I am glad you feel inspired! That keeps me motivated!
Helpdesk opens a lot of opportunities in the tech field. Be willing to learn and have a goal in mind. I went from Help Desk to System Administrator in 4 years for the company i'm currently working for. Before i landed the help desk role, i was just a guy who liked to mess with and build computers. Now i made a career out of it.
Did you have a degree or any certs, Before getting the help desk role?
Im planning to get the three comptia certs instead of a degree would this be ok for me to do?
@@jdt4169 no certs, but I did have a bachelor's degree. wasn't in anything IT related, though.
I am currently in a senior Helpdesk role in a banking environment.... it is very hard and competitive to get a role as Sys/Network admin in that kind of environment. Starting from zero, it won’t take 2 years in that kind of environment
You may need to branch out a bitt. If you have the credentials you should be able to catch the attention of different environments. Bet on yourself! :D
Being an ex Army guy I think of Help Desk as being in the trenches...taking the grenades and bullets...lol. In other words you are the first point of contact when people call or bring their messed up laptop in. Either you can fix it on the spot or create a ticket and escalate it to someone who can. It does not mean you CAN'T fix it, its just not your role and things run smoother when we stay in our lane. Now I'm a Computer Support Analyst which is a fancy term for Desktop Support. I know it sounds the same as HelpDesk, but they are different. Desktop Support is the guy/girl who get that ticket the the HelpDesk person wrote. Desktop support generally does ALL their work from tickets while Helpdesk either fixes stuff on the spot or escalates it to Desktop support
Great Video!! I had a Desktop Support job but was laid off due to the pandemic.. I have my CCNA 200-301, based in Houston, but it’s been so hard to even get an entry level network admin/engineer job... one network admin job posting had more than 700 applicants.. Crazy Times!!
Wow, yeah that’s intense. Gotta find a way to stand out! Go above and beyond!
the perfect counter to socialism is hard working men and women that want to work are humble , willing to learn and have a team of people who understand its worth the time to invest the time and energy helping young people unlock their talents and abilities that will gaurantee a never ending prosperity and no economic down turns.
thanks dude.. inspiring story. i myself going from desktop support tech to "one day" developer (web development). I want to get away from support in IT, but coding really interests me on how web apps function. solving problems like that since the web has become our 2nd lives and something businesses rely on nowadays. its ever so changing every year and can always grow never stagnant - that's the kind of job i am passionate for. doing desktop support is so repetitive and dead end job.. development is highly lucrative.
Same here. Bored job 😭
Good look I’ll be waiting on more to drop
First of all good video, second good advice. Yes, this is possible. Everyone that's brand new usually starts in helpdesk than moves over into network admin or system admin role. If you put in the time, effort, dedication than you can definitely move into high level role after a year in IT. You also need to learn how to market yourself in the job market. Also focus on certifications, your resume and interview skills. When I first started IT, I went for my A+. I started at 9 dollars an hour and jumped to 22 dollars an hour in just over a year. After a year making 22 an hour, I jumped again into 35 an hour. You really need to be aggressive in the job market if you want to move into a different position. You either get promoted in the company or you promote yourself by moving into a different role in another company. Being in IT for over 6 years, my advice for you is not to get stuck in helpdesk or a position that you have no room to grow. Hopefully my advice helps a new person in IT.
Thanks for the story! Very inspiring!
After how many months did it take you to jump from $22 to $35? Also did you have to move out of state to find these better paying positions? Thanks
@@akosuakris took about a year. I doubled my salary back to back every year. I live in New York. Better position and better opportunity. I never left my state.
@@KevtechITSupport New York is to expensive for my pockets. The housing is very high. But the jobs are plenty over there. So maybe I'll have a second look
@@akosuakris you can make a good salary here. You just have to learn how to market yourself. It's all about your confidence and having the ability to answer the questions. Obviously you need a solid resume and also work on your interview skills. If its too expensive in NY than live with other people so you can afford it.
Congratulations man. I'm still trying to figure out exactly what I want to do in IT. I'm on my last semester of my Bachelor's degree in IT and I don't have any real work experience in I.T. I've landed multiple interviews but haven't been hired and I'm thinking it's for multiple reasons which was my availability, lack of experience, and no certifications. Right now I'm taking 6 online courses while trying to get some entry level experience in the field.
You can do it! Keep trying to break down that door. Alot of people I know who got degrees still have to break into the industry via the infamous "helpdesk". Go for those type of roles. I am sure you will land something soon!.
any updates?
Great story and testimony mate! Ty for the encouragement!
Thanks! I appreciate the support!
Great vid I’m also studying CCNA and lab a couple days a week and also built my own internal network. I’m looking for those types of roles, I started IT in 2018 and passed A+ Net+. My ultimate goal is becoming network engineer/ admin and I’m currently at the helpdesk!!!
AMAZING! How is the helpdesk treating you? Getting alot of good experience?
TheBuffNerd I used everything I could from A+ with the helpdesk. Did job shadowing with desktop crew from 6 months and A+ and Net+ helped out a lot. I also did job shadowing with the infrastructure team for 4 months building switches and upgrading the network. Network+ and CCNA was very useful with that. I got a year in with this company and now it’s time for me to branch looking for Networking jobs. Those 30 -50 calls get old REAL quick!!!
TheBuffNerd Are you CCNA Certified or are you still studying for the test?
I had trouble looking for an engineering job that pays well and only managed to get job offers for helpdesk support .. I feel like it's a dead end if I don't chase for the network engineer/admin path
Love it man! Great hustle and great story.
I appreciate the support! Trying to learn all I can and inspire others to do the same!😁
Dude your the it informative I want to hear from everyday? More content lol
I got it lol. I am on the job!
Bruhhh...
I just got thrown into a SysAdmin+NetAdmin hybrid promotion with no team. Just lucky my old boss still loves me enough to mentor. When you said stress, I felt that.
😅😅😅 exactly. It’s a whole different level of anxiety when your “The Gal/Guy”.
Sysadmin - Linux or windows?
@@user.netizen11 Windows luckily. But I'm looking into unbuntu in my spare time in case I decide to go elsewhere and need to know more.
I'm about to start my journey. I bought a few courses & a book to study and do labs for my CCNA. Help desk looks like the foot in the door to gain experience. So, hopefully I can land a job after a few months of studying for my CCNA.
Indeed it is! Make sure you have the basics down prior to going for the heavy hitter roles!!!
Great job sir. Very inspiring your journey.
Glad I can help! 😊
Great one man.. wish you more success. Your hard work will take you places. Love from a stranger for your hard work from india.
Thanks a ton, All the power to you!