There are four IT career silos that good IT leaders must help knock down.

Lawrence Garvin, Technical Product Marketing Manager, SolarWinds

February 18, 2015

11 Min Read
<p align="left">No way to build a career</p>

(The author, Lawrence Garvin, died unexpectedly this month, shortly after filing this column. The column is typical of Lawrence's writing -- opinionated, informed, and filled with concern about the people who make their careers in IT. We offer our condolences to Lawrence's family, friends, and colleagues.)

IT professions are steadily shifting away from what has been considered the natural career progression for the past 20 years. The new path is being shaped by virtualization, cloud computing, and converged infrastructures. For IT professionals who think they're done with career development and can ride the easy train to retirement, this shift will force them instead to step back and venture sideways, into some disciplines they thought they'd left behind when they became tech specialists. For people still early in their careers, this shift will simply create a different career pathway -- away from specialization and more focused on cross-discipline skills.

IT directors and managers need to recognize this shift and take the lead by working now to break down the legacy, siloed approach to IT that has existed for more than two decades. What follows are the four primary silos of IT careers that must be knocked down. Breaking the boundaries between each one and the rest of IT will require a slightly different approach.

Networking Pros: Brace for Change

Networking is probably the most well-known and certainly one of the most siloed elements of IT. Network administrators have functioned in their own bubbles for quite some time. If it didn't involve a cable or a cable connection, it didn't concern them. But networking is likely to be the most radically affected as more networking technology moves away from hardware sitting in a rack with cables plugged into it and toward software-driven configurations that move data around system busses inside a chassis holding converged hardware.

[ Read Lawrence Garvin's widely discussed article The Sorry State of IT Education. ]

Network administrators will have to evolve from their own specialized CLI-based configuration languages toward more graphically driven configuration tools. One possible result of this toolset shift will be that junior IT professionals, trained on the newest equipment and tactics, have an easier pathway into the realm of a new network professional. This advantage will make it more competitive for existing network administrators to maintain their positions.

Database Admins: Silos Will Remain

Database administrators are arguably every bit as siloed as networking professionals, but the convergence paradigm hits them less directly, so they'll keep their silos mostly intact. However, just as hardware is converging by moving storage, networking, and compute power into a single chassis, the application space is also converging across the end-user/client, application server, and the database server.

So even though database professionals will maintain their special skillsets unique to running a database platform, as more emphasis is placed on the performance of the application as a whole, database managers must become more aware of the resources interacting with the database and how the database environment is being used. Database professionals will need to become more network aware, as well as application aware.

Systems Admins: New Competition

Systems administrators will have the easiest road in this evolution since many system administrators are still pursing career development opportunities beyond managing an operating system on a box. The difference will be that instead of developing specialized skills in just networking, databases, or storage, those skills will now become an adjunct skill set and quite likely also include the development of skills in virtualization and cloud management. The challenge for systems administrators, though, will be competition with more senior professionals from both the networking and database arenas for the same jobs.

Storage: First Silo to Fall

The storage silo is the most recent to have developed and will almost certainly disappear most quickly. Storage systems were developed in the first place because it wasn't physically possible to put enough disk spindles into a compute chassis to meet the performance needs of the jobs that could run on that compute chassis. So, we built racks and racks of disk spindles, and then sliced and diced them to give portions of storage to each compute box. But disk spindles no longer require lots of power and lots of space, because disk spindles are being replaced with teeny-tiny solid-state storage devices (SSD). Now it's quite possible to put dozens of SSDs into a single chassis.

In short, convergence is to SANs what PCs did to the mainframe in the 1980s. Yes, they'll continue to exist -- some organizations have too much money invested to even consider pulling the plug for another dozen years -- but managers of those storage systems will likely be in a career limiting occupation, rather than a career building one.

It's a Team Effort

Both IT administrators as well as IT directors and managers need to begin thinking about how to break down these silos of specialization and get everybody aware of and trained on the skills needed for all aspects of computing technology. One near-term step toward this, which works within today's siloed implementation, is to build cross-functional management teams consisting of people from each silo -- networking, database, systems, storage -- and start approaching problem-solving as a group effort. In truth, we should have been doing this for the past 20 years, but now we have a fresh excuse to start.

Encouraging professional development of staff members is a must-do for any IT leader hoping to retain quality people. Fail to develop the necessary cross-functional skill sets, and you'll either lag in your implementation of new technologies, or have to replace staff wholesale with others who have those skills. And it'll be a whole lot more expensive to replace a seasoned IT veteran than it is to develop the needed skills today.

[ Read Lawrence Garvin's widely discussed article The Sorry State of IT Education <http://www.informationweek.com/strategic-cio/executive-insights-and-innovation/the-sorry-state-of-it-education/d/d-id/1204552?itc=edit_in_body_cross> . ]

About the Author(s)

Lawrence Garvin

Technical Product Marketing Manager, SolarWinds

Lawrence Garvin, head geek and technical product marketing manager at SolarWinds, wrote his first computer program, in RPG-II, in 1974, to calculate quadratic equations. He tested it on some spare weekend cycles on an IBM System 3 that he "borrowed" from his father's employer. Since then he has studied, dabbled with, and actually programmed in just about every known computer language. Garvin also has worked on a half dozen different variants of Unix on 3B2s, RS 6000s, HP 9000s, Sparc workstations, and Intel systems. Along the way, he did a few years in database programming and database administration.

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