As stated in the title. I’ve worked in IT for over 15 years despite having no related degree.

I’ve been closing tickets nonstop at my current company for almost 10 years. After several restructurings and shuffling of higher posts, it has become clear to me that while this employer isn’t the worst out there, I will never be internally promoted or have my job duties changed if I don’t leave.

Worse, ever since Covid I’ve started falling out of love with IT and computers in general. I used to be stoked to learn about all the new developments in tech, nowadays, not so much - the only “innovation” I’ve seen in the last 10 years was companies trying to make absolutely everything a fucking subscription model. Now I honestly don’t know nor care what’s in the newest tech stack, how security has evolved,… I just want my shit to work and not having to worry about everything under the hood.

So getting another helpdesk- or related job seems out of the question for mental health reasons.

What would be another niche or industry where someone with an analytical mind and a greatly developed loathing for corporate mooching could find their spot in the coming two decades or so?

I’ve long since accepted that I’ll never be able to climb any ladders anywhere since I never had the right contacts or stayed long enough, so it would likewise have to be something I could mentally and physically endure being in the bottom rungs of for the aforementioned duration.

  • fuzzzerd@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    I’m curious about this, because I have always found every niche I thought I had occupied already, and the idea of trying to start up and beat someone else out felt like a lot difficult proposition for a solo developer without marketing budget or experience.

    • rekabis
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      1 day ago

      Honestly, being the first to market simply means you are shouldering the majority of the risk, and taking the majority of the blind leaps into the abyss.

      The old adage,

      “The early bird might get the worm, but it is the second mouse which gets the cheese.”

      can be very true in business more often than not. As a second-entrant, you can leverage - or avoid - what the first did to prevent yourself from falling into the same potholes they did. Plus, much of what they did - from a tech perspective - may have constrained their later decisions due to tech debt and the need to move fast. You have the ability to maximize similar decisions by building your product with those more advanced options in mind, or at the very least to have the flexibility to add options like that at a later time.