Sunday, September 11, 2005

Information Security Vs. Information Technology career fields

In my experience Information Security as a career field is far superior to Information Technology (IT). I've done both for a number of years. IT seems to get worse every year and Information Security seems to get better.

Overall Information Security pays better, has less competition from competent professionals and usually doesn't have a lot of out of country competition. There are exceptions such as highly specialized IT jobs and management posistions. When I refer to "IT" I'm speaking of basic network engineers and
System Administors not WAN engineering CCIE's, or IT guys with running their own business contracts or very specialized software coders that know assembly. I used to be very excited about IT until I went into the private sector for about a year.

Why does Information Technology suck as a career field?
Well it doensn't necessarily SUCK, but there are several reasons why I will more than likely never go back to vanilla flavored IT: Too much work, Slave wages, competition.

Lets start with too much work. Many business' that rely heavily on their servers, routers, Data bases and other information systems want their systems to be up 24/7 which requires on call workers. I used to be excited about getting the pager and/or corporate cellphone until I got called a few times at the crack of ASS
on a weekend. When a critical system goes down, the IT persons' pager blows up. This sometimes means working long hours. When you are on call, your free time is completely dependent on the status of the Information System. FYI, the system hardly
ever goes down when you're sitting at home thinking, "Damn, I'm bored! I wish I could fix the server." It usually goes off when your
at your daughter graduation or in the middle of your mariage about to say "I DO" or in mid-stroke when you're about to orgasm.

Information Security specialists can also have a "digital leash." But major virus' taking down an entire network is much more rare than a system crash or user error.. especially if you have Windows
behind a good robust firewall.

Slave wages.. o.k. thats an overstatement, but unless you are specialized, as stated above, you will be hard pressed to make over 55k in a basic IT job. Now 55k is pretty good, but in security you can make as much as 100k (particulary in forensics).

The low wages are directly related to the amazing amount of competition you will face as an IT guy. Where I live there are a hand full of military installations which crank out bright young service who are willing to take the minimum that most companies will pay. One of the biggest competitors may not even come from your country of origin. In the U.S., global outsourcing has become an epidemic. India is one of the biggest competitors for American IT jobs including help desk and software engineering.

Information Security typically hires within the host coutries borders. Many even require a secuirty clearance which greatly limits not only international competition, but local competition as well.

The bottom line in Information Technology and Information Security is specialization. The more skilled you are at one particular trade, the more certifications, licenses and degrees you have focusing on one specialized skill that are in demand the better. They may just be pieces of paper but consider them ammunition against the competition that want YOUR job. The specialization doesn't have to be in Security it could be in Database Analysis or Network Management or some programming language.

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