It seems my background is atypical from the ones that have been posted thus far.
Job 1:  Nine years as a manufacturing engineer. Great culture but new boss was 
a jerk. Being a superuser of MAPICS, I left this job to work on the help desk 
of a ERP software developer.  
Job 2:  Three months or so.  Hated the culture.  I was answering calls from MIS 
managers who had been using the software for many years and they were asking me 
why their upgrade failed. I didn't know, this wasn't MAPICS!  I had only two 
weeks training on their software. 50 hours work weeks were the norm. I gave up 
a nine year track record at a company with a good culture for this? Then a 
recruiter calls me out of the blue and says "You don't remember me but we 
talked before and I've got a internal MAPICS help desk job for you".  I think 
he lied about that but I interviewed and got JOB 3.
Job 3: One and a half years.  It's 1998 and this subsidiary of a Fortune 500 
company is consolidating about 15 different worldwide midrange platforms (DEC, 
VAX, AS/400, etc.) and software into one AS/400 running MAPICS and addressing 
Y2K concerns at the same time.  Good culture and it's fun fixing problems for 
internal users.  But, about a year and half later the parent company files 
chapter 11. Scour the Sunday papers for a job and one Monday a co-worker shows 
me a job ad she thinks I might be interested in.  I look at the ad, which I'd 
overlooked in the Sunday paper, and the description is perfect.  I interview 
and get job 4.
Job 4:  Hired as AS/400 operator in 1999. Run jobs, distribute reports, assist 
in Y2K preparation, etc.; but start to get bored. Ten months after I start, MIS 
manager quits and is not replaced.  Trial by fire for awhile as I learn IPL, GO 
SAVE 21, PTF management, troubleshooting network connectivity, CL programming, 
security for SQL via ODBC, etc.
Still here 8 years later and consider myself an "administrator", but I'm still 
called "operator" by some.  With the baby boomers starting to retire, I think 
they'll be a place for administrators for years to come, but I'd be more 
valuable if I had RPG skills.
Bryan        
-----Original Message-----
From: midrange-jobs-bounces+bryan_burns=echo-usa.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[
mailto:midrange-jobs-bounces+bryan_burns=echo-usa.com@xxxxxxxxxxxx]On
Behalf Of David Gibbs
Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2007 11:29 AM
To: midrange-jobs@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Longevity (was: Belated Congratulations Trevor !)
*** Please pay close attention when replying to a message on this list!
*** If you want the reply to go to the list, use REPLY-TO-ALL
*** Recruiters may advertise only permanent employment positions in this list.
Chuck Lewis wrote:
Trevor Perry joins KMR! 
This post in MIDRANGE-L got me to thinking ... anyone know what the
average tenure of a technology worker (System i or other) is these days?
I'm just a few days shy of 10 years at my current job ... longest I've
ever been at a single company.  Before I came here (MKS) I didn't stay
more than 3 years at any one company.  I kind of always was in 'looking
for a new job' mode.
Any thoughts?
david
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.