I agree with Sunn, in that the 'worthwhile' experience you gain is wholly dependant on the size of the company you are with.
Sure, all experience is technically 'good' experience, as even logging and flogging should enable you to make some kind of move up the next rung of the ladder.
As my only IT experience at all is with a medium sized company, I have no real basis for comparison other than what I read and hear from others within IT. From what I can gather, a medium company is the best kind to go for. Especially one that is investing in its staff and on a great growth curve.
Most of you know I'm 'First Line Support' and yes, that does involve directly answering helpdesk calls. I think my job is made easier by the fact that a lot of my users are intelligent people. That doesn't mean they know diddly about IT; they are incredibly advanced in their own fields, but most can't change their own default printers. But their level of demand increases in line with the level of their perceived abilities. No matter how minor the fault, I'm kept on my toes by the fact that everyone believes their problem should be dealt with *now*. So despite being lower on staff numbers and calls logged than a lot of helpdesks might be, the complexity of the people I deal with more than makes up for it as far as my interest level is concerned!
And then there is the workload as a whole. There is no way that when, talking in the 'Support Line' stereotypes, the job I do would be classified as First Line. Aside from knowing Domain Admin details and working on servers, I work on DMS data rooms; server configs; PC builds; software assessment; internal programming projects (not the programming bit, but the speccing of the project. I have also built websites for clients, and am often consulted by the people I support on the internet, on how forums work and suchlike, as they often get mentioned but aren't well understood. On top of this, I do hardware purchasing and asset maintenance, and support the admin team with our IP telephony system. It's neat, this first line malarky
With the right company, first line will never, ever mean first line. As already mentioned, the resource wouldn't be there for members of staff to be so rigidly segmented. Helpdesks shouldn't be underestimated, but there again, they shouldn't be seen as a place to stay for heinously long, as there is always the danger of stagnation. Unless you like it. In which case, if it's what you want to do, and you like it, then where's the problem? lol.
But I can't see corporate helpdesks ever expanding past the 'logger and flogger' script level of working. You want a helpdesk job to be effective? Hunt down jobs in your local paper and by word of mouth, rather than going for the corporate jobbies that may be thrown at you through sites such as Reed and Monster.
EDIT: thanks for the article, Harry. A certain good find. Hope job hunters on CF find it handy
