Is your company being Bled or Fed?
Labels: Analysis, Application, IT Management, Sniffer, Wireshark
Labels: Analysis, Application, IT Management, Sniffer, Wireshark
I write quite a bit about the things on my mind and those topics brought to me by listeners of "The ROOT Cause" Podcast as well as via email. Yet, this Blog seems like the quickest and easiest way for you to post questions or suggest topics. So--What Do YOU Want To Talk About?
Labels: Analysis, Application, Performance, Protocol, Sniffer, TCP/IP, Troubleshooting, Wireshark
Labels: Analysis, Application, IT Management, Performance, Protocol, Sniffer, TCP/IP, Team, Wireshark
Labels: Analysis, Application, Baby Boomer, IT Management, Mentor, Performance, Protocol, Sniffer, TCP/IP, Troubleshooting, Wireshark
by Barry Koplowitz
As IT environments become more complex, technologists and their managers have stepped farther away from trying to understand the “What” or “How” of their technology. Now, the critical skill is to know “Who,” specifically, who are the specialists required for the particular issue of the moment. Even the hands-on IT worker is quickly becoming a contact manager. I can’t help wonder--does anyone have the big picture?
For a solution, we can look to other industries that have faced this challenge and developed ways of resolving the problem. One particular industry jumps immediately to mind. Oddly, this other industry is itself highly criticized--but for other problems. The Health Care Industry. Surely I am not saying that the Health Care Industry works better than our IT Industry. Yup--that is exactly what I am saying. Not their insurance processes; that is a mess! I am referring to their REAL business, the management of your health.
Long ago medicine advanced to a point where no one can know it all. There are specialists of every kind. If you have a problem, you may see many such specialists. But--there is one kind of Doctor that is tasked with keeping the big picture in mind. That Doctor is your Family Practitioner.
This leads us back to Information Technology. What role in the IT organization equates to the Family Practitioner? We need Technical Enterprise Practitioners (TEP)™. This individual (and their team) will be well versed in all aspects of technology, including hardware, software, development, networks, protocols and what is hot (and not) in the world of vendor offerings. They need to be current.
Some companies have explored the role of the Chief Technologist or Chief Scientist. Nevertheless, that is not the position I am describing here. Please don't confuse them. The Technical Enterprise Practitioner (TEP)™ is a very technical General Practitioner and they stay in the technical space. They have the skills to understand any details that are presented to them--plus how those details interact with the rest of the Enterprise. They are also mature people and project managers. They can utilize the big picture to prevent problems, contain costs, improve customer satisfaction, guide hiring and training practices and much more.
Do you know the cost of those problems, or do you only focus on the price of addressing them?
Labels: Analysis, Application, IT Management, Network, Performance, Sniffer, Troubleshooting, Wireshark