I wasn't thinking about being a professor, I was thinking of all the IT and academic computing jobs, and all the programming jobs developing software for research and development projects in various disciplines, and hardware engineering in many disciplines, etc. Only a small percentage of people working in those jobs have a PhD; I'd guess the majority hold only a bachelor's degree or less.
I would LOVE to work in that capacity. Didn't know it was possible. I thought everyone working in academia was either a professor or a PhD candidate, or students working as TAs and RAs.
Most colleges and universities have employment listings on their web sites, so if there are specific places you're interested in, go directly to their sites to start. You could also search more generally for "academic computing" jobs. If there's a specific field you have expertise in, or just a strong interest in, you could also email the heads of departments or labs to ask them if they might have a need you could fulfill (often they don't even list such openings, especially if they're temporary or part-time); those folks are not exactly inundated with emails from interested job-seekers, so your email will stand out and is unlikely to perturb them.