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by DanielBMarkham
6141 days ago
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I do what you call "true" consulting -- I deliver value by being a trusted advisor to folks. I was really good at working on my own. Then I got really good at working in teams. Then leading teams. Then training project managers and architects. Then setting up program offices. Along the way I got a patent on measuring agility in teams -- and did a lot of hands-on startup work. Now I'm the guy you go to when you have a dozen or more teams and somehow your performance tanked as compared to when it was just you and your buds in the dorm: I work on how large groups of developers can play together with maximum efficiency. It's not a solved problem by any means -- it's tough, intractable in some cases, full of varying forms of opinions and expertise which mostly conflict with each other. But it's possible to fix things, or at least make them a lot better. I've found that as I've worked my way up the consulting ladder the situations get more vague, the problems much harder, and the politics a lot tougher. Lots of folks want things to get better, as long as nothing much changes. (grin) My advice as far as making this a career? Read voraciously -- much more than the other guys. Avoid conferences and other forms of "feel good" knowledge acquisition - focus on what works and what doesn't work. Learn to differentiate the idea-of-the-month books from books where the author is exploring what he knows. Learn about five years ahead of where you think the market is going to be. And the one thing I wished I had done better: network. All the time. At some point this business becomes about who you know. The better you network the quicker this happens. |
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