Leaving IBM, and advice for early career IT professionals
Olly Brand
Head of Engineering at The Collecting Group - Collecting Cars - Watch Collecting
This isn’t a post I thought I would be writing. After 22 years, I’m leaving IBM.
A close friend once wrote about a fictitious character, Boliver Rand. Boliver obsessed over IBM. He bled blue and was in it for life. That could have been me.
I have loved my career and the people I worked with! I want to thank all my managers, mentors, coaches, leaders and teams. Without you and your support, I would not have had the opportunities I enjoyed at IBM. To say I will miss you would be an understatement.
Heeding a wise mentor’s point of “Pay mentorship forward!”?I have written the below. In the hope it helps people starting out in their IT Careers.
Here is a link to my blog if you would like to share this post: https://ollybrand.com/2022/08/16/leaving-ibm-and-advice-for-early-career-it-professionals/
Advice for early career IT professionals
Bruce Springsteen wished for his kids to make and learn from their own mistakes. To not repeat his. Here, I offer a combination of my mistakes and things I learned along the way. In the form of 5 things to help people starting out in their IT careers:
Have a plan that aligns with the business
On day 3 of joining IBM, my manager asked me, “What are your career ambitions?”. As a naive 18-year-old, I replied, “3 years to learn new skills and add IBM to my CV. Then I want to go contracting as an IT Consultant”.?SHOW ME THE MONEY. If you didn’t cringe, this is the post for you…
BIG mistake. My manager tried to dig me out of the hole I’d excavated. Alas, I was so deep I didn’t see the lifeline. Imagine you are my manager. You have 20 reports. I told you my intentions were to leave IBM. The other 19 had ambitions to be IBM Developers, Architects, Analysts, Consultants… How can my manager help me achieve what I’ve shared? How much harder is it for them to support my plan? What’s in it for them and IBM?
Imagine if I had said, “I want to be an IBM Consultant”. How much easier would I have made my manager’s job? My manager could have easily supported my career. We could have worked together to develop my plan, skills and network. The easier you make your manager’s job, the more you both get out of the relationship. A classic win, win, win aligned in a way the business also benefits e.g. becoming billable earlier in your career.
It took me 7 years to become an IBM Consultant. I suspect I could have shaved years off achieving this had I said “I want to be an IBM Consultant”. I didn’t even want to contract anymore. I wanted to be an IBMer.
Early in your career, there are fewer expectations of you. It is time to experiment and try different roles. Even later on, don’t be afraid to pivot or change a plan. They aren’t fixed. Aim to be a consultant and find your true calling as an architect, no problem! The breadth of roles and opportunities is a major advantage to working for a large company like IBM.
The only thing worse than a bad plan is no plan! If you don’t have a plan, how can your manager help you? What message are you sending, “I have no idea why I am here”.
If you have no idea, the first step is to work with your manager. Be prepared for the question. Know your likes and ask your manager to help and share their experience, advice and network. A good manager will help develop and support the right plan for you. A bad manager could put you at the bottom of their working stack. Or, coerce you into a doomed plan to suit their agenda. I’ve been that ‘bad manager’. I tried to get a colleague to do 6 months of testing because I needed a test lead and knew they could do it. It did not end well and was a painful lesson learnt.
Have a plan and align it for you, your manager and the business.
Find coaches & mentors
‘Grow your network‘ is classic advice for a reason. Find people you admire, in and out of your work. They become trusted people to discuss ideas and sources of high-quality feedback. Building on the point above, work with them to develop your plan and career. Seek their counsel for big decisions and tricky situations. They will knock some of your edges off by sharing their experiences and viewpoints. They will help you think.
These are some of the most rewarding relationships you can have. If you are lucky, your manager is great at both. If you aren’t so manager-fortunate, other coaches and mentors are crucial. Either way, I recommend having some coaches and mentors not linked to your day job. The air gap offers less biased advice and fresh perspectives. For example, an outside view of the business and industry.
Don’t be afraid to ask or approach people. It is nice to be asked. A lot of professions need examples of mentoring and coaching for promotions. You might even be doing them a favour. Likely, they will be busy people. You will need to find a way to interact that works for them. Some will come and go. Some will be useful at specific times. I’ve never once regretted a discussion, email or asking.
I’ve been fortunate. A lot of my mentors are now good friends. I try to live up to their standards and pay it forward (like this blog attempt). When you’ve reached a point you are able,?pay it forward; Coach and mentor.?
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Find your fourth batsman
This advice is courtesy of Ramesh. Ramesh described my impact on his role as that of a fourth batsman. He felt I enabled him to smash balls as our opening batsman. Safe in the knowledge, that if the worst happened, I was in as number 4. Ready to go in and “save the day”. This describes and names another important relationship; Find your fourth batsman. Someone who offers you in-role advice and air cover. Someone who encourages you to push and take calculated risks. Whilst offering coaching and a safety net should the worst happen. And, when you no longer need a fourth batsman, work out how you can be the fourth batsman to give others the chance to open.
You don’t need to be a manager to be the fourth batsman. All teams and squads benefit from a good fourth batsman. Even if that means staying out of the way while your openers hit centuries and bring the team home. Enable and empower more junior members of the team. Encouraging them to excel and grow should be a significant part of being in a senior role.
Thank you, Ramesh! Watching you open has been a pleasure.
Doing a good job is not enough
Who turns up to work with the approach “Today, I am going to do a bad job!”? Accepting everyone has the odd bad day. Most people turn up to work to do a good job. We can assume doing a good job is the average. To be above average requires a blend of:?
*This one was learnt the hard way. I hated IBM’s 360 review process and would put it off. All I achieved in a year was let down by a rushed write-up. Delivered in the closing minutes, or worse, late. You are a manager with your reports submitting their end-of-year reviews. You take these to moderation to face off against your peers and their reports. Is it easier to represent and sell a well-written case delivered with lots of time spare? Or the scraped-together one you had to chase and arrived over the weekend…
Code
Learning to code is often dismissed as a means to be a developer. However, learning to code:
Do it! There are many innovative ways to learn! O’Reilly’s Safari and Udemy platforms are available to all IBMers and offer impressive instructor-led courses. Why work in tech if you aren’t curious about coding? Code is fundamental. Working in tech without a basic level of coding is like saying, “I want to be a journalist but I’ll skip grammar, thanks!”. You would end up writing blog posts like this…
Bonus: Be the underdog
Overdeliver versus over-commit. Another lesson learnt the hard way. Say yes to too much or the wrong thing and you start on the back foot. Being too confident on a training course pins a marker on your back. Oversell yourself, idea or plan and you start from behind. Sometimes the pressure is good. But if there is no slack, it is harder to deliver without leading to issues. Issues like burnout or sacrificing too much life for work. Both are best avoided.
People get behind the underdog. Leaving room to overdeliver bakes contingency into everything you do. I have too many examples of this going wrong. Especially in my mid-20s. I was hungry to prove I was the shiz and merely proved I was an idiot. Thankfully, the people I worked with had the patience to coach and mentor me. No one likes the shiz. Worse, no one likes people trying to prove they are the shiz. Good managers can help here. Bad managers can pour fuel on the fire. Coaches and mentors diffuse the risk of all your career hopes and dreams resting on your manager. I was lucky and owe three big thanks in chronological order:
Commit to the 5 points and deliver a bonus sixth.?I’m still learning this! As an energetic optimist, I want to do it all :D.
Side note:?I’ve mentioned good and bad managers. That’s more for the benefit of telling the story and examples. In reality, the world is less polarising. Few relationships are perfect. Some managers are exceptional for all and everything. For others, it is a more complex juggle of strengths and weaknesses. Theirs and yours.
There are far too many people to thank. It has been a privilege to be an IBMer. With a heavy heart, I’ll say goodbye to IBM. For now…
Olly/Oliver/Boliver
What’s next???
I'm joining Collecting Cars (The Collecting Group) as their Cloud Architect and I'm excited to work with AWS and Cars!!!
Lecturer at Coleg Gwent
1 年This is really a great piece Olly, will be sharing with my students.
Perpetually seeking ways to help others with their life journey, through fun, games and connections.
2 年How funny to read your opening para. As a naive 16 year old I sat in front of the Army Recruiting Colour Sergeant after having passed the aptitude test and declared "I want to join the REME, become a Vehicle Mechanic, serve my mandatory 6 years and leave to set up my own garage".... Will share rest of the story at Anglesey no doubt...
I was all ears as soon as I saw your Bruce reference! Great advice, thanks for sharing.
Bilingual operations leader with 25 years managing all facets of business/sales operations, projects, compensation & benefits for a large workforce, to enhance business performance across a global tech organisation.
2 年Really happy and excited for you Olly! ????
Unosson.IT Projects | Change & Stakeholder Management
2 年I in. B.