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359- Implementing AI With Kevin Kuttin

359- Implementing AI With Kevin Kuttin
Dissecting Popular IT Nerds
359- Implementing AI With Kevin Kuttin
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ON THIS EPISODE:

➤ Strategic approaches to implementing AI in healthcare technology

➤ Effective methods for retaining top IT talent in today’s market

➤ Building successful hybrid work environments

➤ Bridging knowledge gaps between veteran and new-gen tech professionals

➤ Building authentic relationships across organizational hierarchies

🏥 From Healthcare Tech to Leadership Wisdom: Kevin Kuttin’s Journey at Regenesis

A fascinating conversation with Kevin Kuttin, Executive Director of IT at Regenesis, where technology meets medical innovation in pain management. From Arcade games at Radio Shack to leading IT strategy in healthcare, he shares valuable insights on managing teams across technological generations, navigating the shift to cloud computing, and maintaining team cohesion in remote environments. Kevin offers practical wisdom for today’s IT leaders.

Kevin discusses how his path from help desk to executive leadership shaped his understanding of effective team management and organizational growth. He shares actionable strategies on retaining talent and creating a balanced work environment in today’s evolving tech landscape.

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Disclaimer: The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed by guests on this podcast are solely their own and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of their employers, affiliates, organizations, or any other entities. The content provided is for informational purposes only and should not be considered professional advice. The podcast hosts and producers are not responsible for any actions taken based on the discussions in the episodes. We encourage listeners to consult with a professional or conduct their own research before making any decisions based on the content of this podcast

359- Implementing AI With Kevin Kuttin

3 Key Takeaways

Episode Show Notes

⏱️ TIMESTAMPS:
00:23 – Introduction to Regenesis and medical technology
02:51 – Early career beginnings and evolution
05:09 – Discussion of technology generation gaps
07:33 – Legacy knowledge in modern IT
15:31 – AI implementation challenges
26:04 – Employee retention strategies
31:00 – Hybrid work environment management
34:09 – Career development and transitions
42:31 – Leadership philosophy and treating people equally

Transcript

Speaker 0 | 00:00.744

Kevin Kooten, everyone. Welcome back to dissecting popular it Nerds. This is like a soft start today and works for Regenesis, a pain, I guess, a medical equipment manufacturing, remove pain without the drugs type of thing, which is, I’m sure your marketing department would love that, how I just, how I ripped that off, you know what I mean? Don’t need the drugs, I’m here. Yeah,

 

Speaker 1 | 00:23.804

well, no, that’s it. I mean, like, I mean, this really is, you know, It’s marketed at AT Veterans specifically to help with the, you know, an alternative to the opioids. You know, so they, you know, they don’t have a lot of with those goods. In general, not a lot of people have a lot of good reactions with it. There’s a ton of side effects. And so this is one of those things where where our device is basically equivalent. Now I don’t work in the regulatory department, so I don’t. I don’t sell this for a living. So I’m probably saying things that are very wrong. But,

 

Speaker 0 | 00:57.781

Uh,

 

Speaker 1 | 00:58.741

it’s, uh, you know, this is not medical advice and I am not a salesperson. Um, but the, uh, you know, it’s, uh, it’s one of those things where it works, uh, basically equivocally. To help, you know, get, you know, pain management and to give these people their, their lives back. Uh, so it’s, uh, it’s really great. Like, I, I, I think it’s, uh, I think it’s a really great cause, and I think it’s a really great company to work with. So,

 

Speaker 0 | 01:21.490

and, and the only reason why is because I went down to Dark Hole the other day. because, um, for those of you listening, I did a lot of Brazilian jiu-jitsu, surfing and lifting in my days. And I don’t know, it’s taking its toll. And yeah, so I have a C7, C6 herniated disc. Probably what looks like also a C6, C5 now. And I have been in like excruciating pain. And the worst thing you can probably do is go on a Reddit forum and start looking at other people with back pain. Because you’ve got a lot of people that are like, I want to kill myself. I’m not kidding you. I’m not kidding you. It’s bad. If you’ve ever had back pain. pain. It’s, it’s really bad. And, uh, and people like, yeah, just become a heroin addict. It’s like, for real, because that’s the only choice that you have. And, uh, so I don’t know, I’m, you guys can send one of these to me if you want to let me know how I can buy this thing. I’m not that bad yet. Really. I mean, I, I, I hope I never get that bad, but it’s, you know, there’s days where I was like, I’ve never experienced pain like this before. So this is an IT show, however, and, uh, this is a, but it guys have bad posture. So the other thing is what really causes, probably not jujitsu and surfing, all those things that probably actually did me some good. Um, it’s probably sitting in a desk all day, hunched over bad posture, using cell phones and things like this. Which is this now? This is how we make the this, how we make the connection. So please tell me how you got into this? Um, I want your story. Let’s go back to story time. How’d you get into this thing? What was your first computer? I don’t know, life-altering experience with, um, a Nintendo or something.

 

Speaker 1 | 02:51.679

Oh my gosh. It was… Oh gosh, it was a long time ago, in a land far, far away. Uh, that, uh, the honestly, I mean, I got into to computers and stuff just because, um, well, with, uh. With my grandfather. We used to. On Friday nights, we used to, uh, go to, uh. My grandparents, uh, my grandmas would go shopping and I would go to, uh. Barrel of fun. Which was an arcade that was right outside the particular department store, or they love to shop in. And so we’d go and do that. And whenever he had enough of me, you know, spending thousands of dollars for a 25 set spider ring, we would go across the way to Radio Shack. They existed way back in the day. And, you know, and I played with the computers there, and it was, it was minesweeper was like the big, gigantic thing. And, of course, there were some other little, little games out there. Tetris, I think was one, you know, kind of, they always had one up. You know, kind of in an area they knew kids were going to come in and play and stuff like that. So, um, so it was getting into it that way, uh, and and really finding a love of it, and then that just grew over time. Um, and uh, yeah, I mean. And along the way, I found things I don’t like about computers, like, I’m I’m not a programmer, it’s, it’s not my thing. I mean, when I went to college, that was a bunch of classes were programming, and, uh, and I, this is not what I’m good at. I mean, like, I can do it. I often tell people there’s not seven-figure paychecks that make me do that. So they usually back off of that real quick. But, you know, what I have a passion for is the administrative side, the server side. And I’ve come to it the long way. I mean, I started on the help desk and moved from help desk to systems admin to handling the servers themselves. From more of an engineering perspective. And then got into… Business continuity and disaster recovery. And being an exchange admin for a while. And uh, and then eventually moved into managing, uh, international help desks for for one of our companies, and uh. And then kept on moving into management. And and now I’m here. I sit an executive director of a biomedical company in the IT department. So yay, I know that’s just how it is, you know, I was a writing major,

 

Speaker 0 | 05:09.011

I was, I, I minored in poetry. Um, and here I am. And, uh, I remember seeing the people with the C plus plus thick books in their rooms. I was like, what’s that? I was like, I don’t know, but it’s not what I’m doing, but here I am. The, you know, there’s this, you mentioned this interesting gap. When we, uh, when we sift and sort and try to find, um, the right IT leaders to have on the show, you mentioned to this, uh, a gap. And I noticed it even more yesterday when we had our very secret. AI use case form without the vendor hype, whatever we want to call that. But the gap that has been, I think this gap that you spoke about, the gap maybe between what you had mentioned was. There’s a gap between kind of the old technology people and the new technology people. The new technology? People have no clue really where the internet came from, or any of that. They don’t know. Maybe they do. I’m just making that up. They might say, How dare you? Of course, I studied that. But never maybe kind of experienced the dawn of this new era, which really isn’t that long ago. What is frustrating or difficult about that?

 

Speaker 1 | 06:13.718

Well, you know, I mean, it is interesting because I’ve got people that work for me, that haven’t come through all of that. So, like Case in point, one of the guys that works for me is my cloud engineer, and he’s brilliant at the cloud. Part of it. And, uh, and he understands the server, part of it for our physical servers that are still on site. But whenever you have to go back and hunt down bigger issues that are deeper and wider and more nuanced, that’s kind of where it falls apart. And that’s not, he’ll end up listening to this and be so mad at me.

 

Speaker 0 | 06:52.987

Let’s bring our senior by, get him on the mic right now.

 

Speaker 1 | 06:57.429

Luckily, he is working from home today. The uh, whenever he listens to this, he will come into my office and slap me, but the uh, um, you know, it’s, uh. It’s one of those things where, you know, when you kind of dive into the server side of things and really get further back into. You know, server architecture. And and you know, where Windows has come from over the years. Especially, uh, you know, a problem that he can’t find a solution to. I can eventually get there. I’m not going to say I can do it in five minutes, but you know, it’s, uh, we can get to those points. Why can’t I do it in five minutes?

 

Speaker 0 | 07:33.402

No, yeah, yeah. Why can you do something that he can’t? And obviously, he can do many things that you cannot do. That’s why you’re in the position you’re in, leadership.

 

Speaker 1 | 07:42.587

Absolutely. Plus, you know, and I think it’s because I’ve come through, you know.

 

Speaker 0 | 07:48.852

But it’s got to be something like, did you think about this? Did you think about this? And he’s like, oh, I didn’t know that even existed. Or, I mean, what is it, you know?

 

Speaker 1 | 07:55.455

You know, it’s that, it’s, it’s, you know, oh, you know, I remember that we had this problem way back when, and there’s this setting over here in IIS that we need to go flip. And it’s like, well, we’re not even using IIS on that server. I know, but that’s where the setting happens to be, like, you know, kind of thing. You know, so it’s things like that. And, you know, like we had a, when we were trying to get Windows Hello to work for our full enterprise, our certificates just were not working. And it took me going back. To some very old notes for some very far away companies to go. So lotus nuts, maybe some lotus here, exactly like here, here’s where these, uh, you know, here’s where these this certificate problem might be coming from. And then, lo and behold, after working on it for three days, it was like, Oh, yep, that was it. And found it and now we can actually move forward. Um, weird, you know, it’s, it’s knowing, you know, it’s, it’s not, there’s. There’s nothing wrong with with the knowledge that people are coming into to the business with, I mean, it, and it’s, and it’s not their fault. Because, you know, people are much more cloud-centric now and much more virtualized now. And you’re, you know, you’re removing the the back end works of a server from, you know? Now they just get an admin center to go to. I’m going to go to this website and I’m going to configure these settings and it either does or doesn’t work. And you know, I mean, and I know that, like Microsoft and AWS and all them. Do a whole bunch of coding under the hood

 

Speaker 0 | 09:20.271

to just make that little radio button or that checkbox work. Oh, that weird, that’s a still blows my mind. yeah, it blows my mind if you actually saw, well, first, I want to get off talking because I bet you I, there’s something popping into my mind. That would just be like, this great session for a show, and, uh, or, I mean, section for the show. And I’ll be like, I bet you, there’s a prompt for that, I bet you there’s a prompt for you, like an A I prompt for that. And it would have to be one of those scenario ones where you’re, like, pretend you’re an old it guy. They grew up in it from back in the day. You worked on all these servers and you knew, and you worked on Windows, this, this, and this. And this is your current problem. Where do you think it could be? I wonder if that would work. I wonder if you could figure that out.

 

Speaker 1 | 10:00.751

Good question. Like, I have not thought about that. That is quite a possibility.

 

Speaker 0 | 10:04.695

I wonder. We should try that out. If we’re doing this show live like we should be right now, which we’re getting. By the way, everyone listening, you’ve got to go follow us on YouTube. Never done YouTube. I think we got nine followers. Okay. We’ve got, I’ve got 17,000 on LinkedIn, nine on YouTube. Okay. And I’m thinking we’ve got a few thousand on our LinkedIn page. So go follow YouTube right now. And the reason why you should do that is this is gonna be really cool. And you can get on these live panels and it’ll be fun. And we’ll talk about crazy things and people will see the, this guy that’s speaking right now. My name is Phil Howard. You’ll see me in the real live flesh and we’ll do it live on YouTube. And we’ll do things like Who’s got the prompt? What’s the prompt right now? We’ll have, like the prompt team, and I don’t know, maybe we could just figure out this prompt right now. You’re a I.T. guy that was born sub 1980. I hope I didn’t just make you too old sub 1985. You look younger, there you go, you look younger than me. Uh, so it’s up 1985 and you had experience with, I don’t know. In college. People were doing C plus, plus, you were around at the invention of email. And, uh, you know things that other people don’t know. This is the problem going on. How pretend to be this person, I don’t know. Fix it that. Just to me, that would be really cool and kind of completely forgot where we were going with that other thing before this. But uh, there was another, there was another segue to something really cool. But that would have been like the section of the show that we didn’t do. Called What’s the prompt for that? what’s the AI prompt for that? So so this gap is interesting, so we have this big gap, we have the gap between the old school and the new school. And you’re gonna get slapped later for that. Probably. Uh, uh, Uh, no, One other thing that made me think about this whole thing, when you mentioned the AWS and the cloud, remember the cloud, remember when the cloud was important, if you notice how, like vendors and salespeople in marketing, we just, when something gets old, we just change the name for it. For example, it’s no longer the cloud, it’s, um, I a a S, or infrastructure as a service. Yep. What the hell is that? Oh, that’s by the way, we just had to change the name because, uh, I don’t know, the clouds old now. So now we’re going to call it infrastructure as a service. Which I think is the same thing. Isn’t it the same thing as the cloud, or is it a little bit more nuanced?

 

Speaker 1 | 12:12.360

I think it’s really the same thing. I mean, you know, at the end of the day, some marketing person got paid a lot of money to figure that out.

 

Speaker 0 | 12:18.183

And- he just copied UCAS, Unified Communications as a Service, which used to be, what did UCAS used to be?

 

Speaker 1 | 12:24.306

Oh, I, this is what, VoIP?

 

Speaker 0 | 12:27.027

Exactly, voice over, yeah, and then we have the the vote p, we have the the vote people of the world, all you I core people out there. That when you came up and their voip wasn’t strong yet and there was no uh, qos on the internet, everything they called, Oh no, we’re vote P, we’re voicing. Private Tinder we need to buy. You have to buy an expensive MPLS circuit in order for our crap to work. Um, but we’re gonna make it sound like it’s no, no, no, don’t go voip, never go voip, you gotta go vote p, voice over, private. Sorry, that’s just. Was hilarious. The things that I’ve seen people come up with over what’s the what’s the craziest thing you’ve ever seen someone try to sell you? It was like, really like, like it was, you were being sold. The I don’t know newest Millennium Falcon, but it was really like, I don’t know, not, the Millennium Falcon’s really old now. So I don’t know what. You know, you were being sold a Lamborghini, but it was really a, I don’t know, 1987, Nova.

 

Speaker 1 | 13:28.231

In green, um, no go in Spanish, which is why it’s, Oh my god, the uh, you know, I, I’m. I’m not really recalling anything major like like that, but I. But I will tell you, I just. I just came back from a from a Microsoft Fabric conference up in Vegas, uh, and it was a great conference. Highly recommend it for for those in the community that that you know need the information or using in your business. But um, the interesting thing that I found a lot of vendors up there trying to sell was they wanted to make it their spin and how they had the secret sauce on something to do. In FabricPic, whatever your favorite thing is, Power Bi, or the actual fabric itself, or SQL or whatever, Azure database, or whatever the case may be. And they wanted to sell you their secret sauce. And when you took just half a second and looked at their secret sauce. All they were doing was using what you already have access to in fabric or Power BI, or whichever program of interest you were looking at. They were just implementing it for you, but calling it something fabulous and wonderful. And it’s like this. I can go click the box, too, it’s fine. Like, yeah, that could have been banged out in a in a white paper. Yeah, absolutely, you know, I mean. And it wasn’t even like the it wasn’t like the fast track type stuff. Like, okay, you have none of this. And we’re going to come in and help you, you know, get your data in place and figure it out. So I think I think those are wonderful, very valuable tools, I’ve taken advantage of them many times. But, um, you know, literally marketing to me, I’m going to, you know, this secret sauce thing. And it’s like, yeah, that’s a checkbox. That’s a script that’s readily available on the internet that I can run myself. Like that kind of stuff. It’s like, no, I don’t need to pay you thousands, upon thousands, upon thousands of dollars to do something I can do.

 

Speaker 0 | 15:18.339

Isn’t that the same thing with AI now? Isn’t there like, a big difference between, like, a learning model or a language model, and just someone else’s spin on prompting? And then we just stamped it out on our website and did it as an add-on, as a product?

 

Speaker 1 | 15:31.307

I think that that is beginning to happen. I mean, people are seeing a great way to be able to use that. I mean, you know, and we’re seeing that.

 

Speaker 0 | 15:38.513

It’s more legitimate there, maybe, than this other thing, because there is a lot.

 

Speaker 1 | 15:43.918

Oh, yeah.

 

Speaker 0 | 15:44.639

And someone could, you could, I mean, I think it’s more someone you would hire someone for. Like, I need an AI automation expert or something. Is there such a title yet? Like, automation guy?

 

Speaker 1 | 15:57.009

They’re definitely coming. That’s for sure. I mean, you know, AI, as we know it now, is, you know, still in its infancy. And it’s coming around. But, you know, but I think that’s why those things exist. Like, people are, I mean, people are scared of it. Like, you know, I mean, I’m lucky that I work for a company that’s all, you know, Gung ho about using it. And, you know, of course, how do we use it with all the right regulations and all that kind of stuff. But, you know, coming from actually just talking to people at that conference a few weeks ago, like, it’s companies that are scared to death. Of using it. And, you know, it’s like, oh my gosh, this is gonna, you know, this is gonna take all of our data and give it to Google or Microsoft, or wherever, or they’re just gonna just post it on the internet. It’s like, no, that’s not how it really works. I mean, yeah, you could go rogue and do some things, but that’s not really how it works. And like those kinds of things. So, like, I mean, I think that there absolutely is, you know, a coming age of the, some of it is snake oil salesmen. For like, oh, I’ve created this prompt and it can do all these things for you. Well, all they did was just load the knowledge in. Kind of thing. I mean, and there’s value in that. But it’s going to be very interesting to watch all of this continue to morph and change over the next several years. As it really takes hold and goes crazy. We are going to end up with people who are AI prompting engineers or AI engineers or whatever it will turn into.

 

Speaker 0 | 17:20.624

Yeah, just someone really good at using all of the tools, and I don’t know, maybe we’ll get them up.

 

Speaker 1 | 17:26.375

Column Operations He’ll be, he’ll be under operations. Yeah, one of the things that I think is going to be interesting to see. Um, you know, because now you’re getting to the point where you can ask it to do code for you and then take that code and turn it into something else. So, like, I could say, you know, I could use an AI agent in my SQL database and say, Hey, I want you to spit me out this information. And then it gives me that table of information with all the the inner joins and outer joins and all that kind of crazy stuff. And then take that same code and go drop it into an AI bot for Power Bi and go, now make me a report off of it. Which, fantastic. That is such a time saver and really great way to do things. But back to our earlier conversation, talking about the difference between older engineers and new engineers, the future ones aren’t even going to know how to use the website to click the button. It’s going to be, well, I couldn’t tell the AI agent that because it didn’t work, and I don’t know how to make that work. Like, oh, okay. We’re going to end up in a new situation. We may not get that bad. It’s going to be a new and different learning gap.

 

Speaker 0 | 18:33.812

Why wouldn’t we get that lazy? I think it’s going to be a matter of like, no, but really, I think it’s going to be a matter of creativity. Is the uncreative person going to just, you know, what’s going to happen?

 

Speaker 1 | 18:44.361

It’s going to be interesting. The uncreative person is going to.

 

Speaker 0 | 18:50.927

I don’t know, be become the mediocre engineer, I guess I, I don’t know. I mean, it’s just going to be, it’s, it’s really quite. Um, um, and then the I. The gap might be, the gap might grow larger between America and other just other countries in general. Like, I’m in, uh, I’m in Morocco right now, in one of our studios in Morocco. Because I have. And what’s interesting is the reason why I’m here is because I did hire, um, an AI and development team here. They’re all expats. Uh, you know, Greg’s from from France, he’s got a beautiful French accent, and he’s like, ridiculously on top of. Like, every new thing that comes out in a I don’t even know, like, I know that, like, the whole podcast is like, kind of automated, like the production process. And there’s like all these gears running on a single pane of glass somewhere. And this app is using this app, and there’s we don’t even use Zapier anymore because it’s some other thing that’s, you know, um, so he’s a genius at that. And it would take, uh, it’s something that would normally take, you know, probably numerous people. I don’t know what to do. Or would just take longer, it would just take longer, kind of more, and it’s more time to do things. Uh, so. But then I walk out and I walk down the street and I look, and I go into a store and I realize there’s no receipts, there’s no POS system, there’s no computer. I look at a construction material being delivered, I look at things doing this, there’s no ERP system, there’s none of that. It’s old books and papers and pens writing. And, uh, I just see the gap. the gap could get very large for some places. Yeah,

 

Speaker 1 | 20:27.376

absolutely, I definitely think that’s going to happen. Um, you know, it’s it. AI is getting to be so pervasive, especially with going in like your iPhone. And now obviously with with Google’s piece of it and it going into Android. And and and everybody seems to be coming up with their own flavor of AI. But it’s going to be very interesting to see how it plays out globally. Is China or America, or both, going to become very popular with AI? And then it’s going to be kind of the way of the future. And then other emerging countries, from a technology perspective, are not nearly as quick. And it’s going to be a much larger gap. Or are they going to all of a sudden just go from ostensibly the dark ages to current modern infrastructure? It’s a very interesting thing that may happen to us.

 

Speaker 0 | 21:22.679

You mentioned mentoring, and I guess I’d be curious to see how you the space in general, the IT leadership space in general. How is all of this affecting the temperature or the aura? I’m trying to think of the right word. The the market space of I.T leadership jobs, or the job space, and what? What would your advice be to other I.T leaders that may be worried about? I don’t know, getting a new job, finding a job, uh, finishing a career up, growing in their career. Are we? Is there like, there’s something going on right now, you know, I I think a lot of requests lately, I’m getting a lot of requests lately for, um, just, you know, It just seems like the job market, like the IT job market, is kind of in a weird position right now. I don’t, I don’t want to say negative. I don’t want to go too negative. It’s bad and people are losing their jobs and the and the, you know, the pay is going down and all of this. But that’s kind of what I’m hearing.

 

Speaker 1 | 22:23.556

You know, I think, I mean, just just looking at things and kind of keeping my ear to the ground, just in terms of having to hire people to to work for me over various projects. Doing or stuff like that and then just talking to people you know in the industry through, you know, various channels, the It it. We have come to an interesting time. Um, though, seemingly everyone says that about every March, April, May, because all of a sudden Q1 budgets are released. People got their um, people got their bonuses, people, you know, didn’t get a raise, didn’t get a bonus, whatever. They’re looking to jump ship, those kind of things, and so, like, everything fluctuates about right now anyway. Um, you know, good or bad it, you know, it kind of operates right now, it’s that job, that great job. Change, jump, period of time, yeah, you know, seasonally kind of thing, but then I think, you know, the the. The bigger things that are going on in the world are all of a sudden. These I.T guys that are being dumped out of Facebook and Google and and Meta, and all of the, you know, the big giant silicone companies that, um, you know, they’re all of a sudden they’ve hit the streets. and, you know, and it’s true, you know, they’re not commanding the $250,000, $300,000, $400,000 salaries when now there’s a glut of these people on the market. And it’s like, oh, well, I work for Google or I work for Facebook. Well, that’s great. It’s super nice. We’re not those people.

 

Speaker 0 | 23:49.058

What did you do there? Did you get a ticket for the men’s hand dryer in the bathroom that needs to be flipped?

 

Speaker 1 | 23:55.619

You know, that is obviously happening. Um, and, and I think that that is changing the market to a degree, you know, But at the end of the day, talent is still talent. And, you know, when you can find the right person for your job that has the, you know, the right skillset, um, you know, be that soft skills. or, um, you know, you, you’re willing to pay for that. Now, I mean, that’s not saying that, you know, you know, we’re all going to go break our budget all of a sudden, but, um, you know, I, I think that, that being honest, whenever you’re, you know, setting up a a salary range for a job is very good. And then using your salary range, you know, like, if I make, you know, our finance department and our human resources department. Aware that, you know, hey, the range for this job is, I don’t know, let’s say 70 to 100. And I find the right candidate, and I got to pay them 99. Well, we’re going to pay them 99. Like, that’s what we’re going to do. You know, it’s, but then we have a, you know, we have an employee that’s satisfied. We have an employee that’s happy. They’re producing good work. They want to stay with the company. Like, I have longevity. I don’t have a two-year hop. Like, it’s. You know, you, you, I don’t have somebody trying to, uh, do my job and look for the next job that pays them more money, kind of thing, you know you. You have a much better, you know, quality of work out of that person. They’re also much happier with their their job and so they have a quality life and all those kind of things. Um, you know, but. But that also is to say you have to keep learning and understanding what’s going on in the world. That doesn’t necessarily mean certifications or going back to school to get a, you know, your MBA. Or put it this way,

 

Speaker 0 | 25:34.349

let’s put it this way. What do most people come to you for advice on? I don’t even care if it’s not it related, but you’ve got, there’s, there’s people that come to me and they always come to me for certain things. And what do they come to you for when they come to you? What do they come for? What do they ask?

 

Speaker 1 | 25:52.474

How can we fix this problem with our employee? How can we get the right person in the right seat? What do to keep the, keep them happy.

 

Speaker 0 | 26:00.152

Okay. So what do you do to keep people happy? What’s the, what’s the typical like scenario, like, what’s going on? Well,

 

Speaker 1 | 26:04.996

it’s paying them what they’re worth. That starts, you know, everybody wants money. Then the next one is, is, you know, it really centers around a work-life balance and benefits, and, and, you know, and, and it moves beyond, you know, work-life balance. You know, we, we all talk about it, but, but finding a company that actually follows what they, you know,

 

Speaker 0 | 26:21.905

what is work-life balance? Like, what is it really? Is it, I can do whatever the heck I want, whenever I want. And if I feel like working today, I will. I mean, what is it? I mean,

 

Speaker 1 | 26:29.069

  1. I don’t think that we’ve gone that far yet. Um, that’s the idea, that’s the ideal. Yeah, yeah, yeah, sure, that’s the ideal. Um, you know, but. But I mean, I think it. Um, you know, the work-life balance is obviously something that that works for everybody, you know, like, I mean, if I’ve got, you know, an employee that needs to go to a doctor’s appointment at 11 o’clock in the morning. I don’t need them to take eight hours of PTO to do that, I need you to go to your doctor’s appointment and we’ll figure it out. You know, like it’s not the end of life. Uh, you know, you being gone for an hour isn’t making or breaking anything, especially, you know, I mean, obviously I’m talking about good performing employees here. I’m not talking about, you know, the problem shot.

 

Speaker 0 | 27:03.588

The guy that has a doctor’s appointment every other day.

 

Speaker 1 | 27:07.470

Exactly. You know, like the, you know, we’re going to figure it out, you know, Because I feel like, whenever you have a work-life balance, it, you, you watch the clock less, you know, and that’s not to say that, you know, you know, I want you to give me something that, you know, you’re not getting paid for. I don’t want that by any stretch, but. But if you’re working on a project, it’s like, okay, it is a slam laptop shut at five o’clock. It’s like, okay, well, I got to work on this for about another hour. And you do kind of thing. It’s like, great, fantastic. That’s wonderful. Pay,

 

Speaker 0 | 27:36.509

work-life balance, pay them what they’re worth, work-life balance. So that they actually do enjoy kind of what they’re doing, which is probably another thing is, how do you make sure people enjoy what they’re doing? I guess it’s make sure the right people are in the right seat. Absolutely. Okay, benefits. Yeah. Why are people coming to you for this?

 

Speaker 1 | 27:55.416

Cause we seem to do it pretty well over here.

 

Speaker 0 | 27:58.357

Okay. Okay.

 

Speaker 1 | 27:59.077

You know, it’s, it, it’s, it’s one of those things where one, one of the things that I’ve been, I say, I’m lucky. I certainly don’t think that I’ve been the, I don’t think that I’ve, you know, cornered the market on any secret sauce, by any stretch, but, um, you know, I’ve got a lot of employees over the years that, that have either followed or, you know, wanted recommendations on where to go work. or, or, you know, I’ve been able to, you know. Say their names whenever they weren’t even in the room and go, oh, you know who you should call, you should call this person that they can, they can probably help you out. Like, you know, whether you hire them or not, at least go give them an interview. They’re, they’re worth your time. Um, you know, that kind of thing. And then, you know, like I, I’ve been incredibly lucky, you know, in my last two or three jobs. That we, we’ve had a pretty good retention rate, um, that, you know, has done much better than the overall company’s retention. Um, because I believe in those things, pay them what they’re worth, give them a work-life balance. And then, you know, it’s, it’s benefits beyond just, you know, health and dental and medical, and, you know, those kinds of things. It’s, you know, those are kind of table stakes. It really starts coming to work at home and working remotely. And that’s a big one in the IT world. I mean,

 

Speaker 0 | 29:09.430

and we all sit here. Oh, you know, that’s huge. It’s huge. I was going to say, taco Tuesdays, but you just said, work at home.

 

Speaker 1 | 29:14.793

Yeah. You know, taco Tuesdays is great, too. But should the. You know, it’s working at home, working remote. I mean, like, we’ve all said it for years. I absolutely have said it. Why do I have to be in this office where you can see me? And then guaranteed some. VP’s answer always is, well, that’s where the servers are. Obviously, you don’t know where the servers are. They’re three and a half hours away from here, behind a locked door in another building.

 

Speaker 0 | 29:36.326

I do find a case. I do find so all of my guys are pretty much remote, but we have an office. It’s kind of like a, like a, what do you call it? Like, one of those like… Offices where you can come and go, do whatever you want. We’ve got other people that come, like sometimes their friends come like, Hey, who are you? like, Okay, you know, um? But what I have found is that even if we just get together once a quarter for like a week or four days of just like powwow, like goal setting and going through the plans and two-week sprints and things like that, that’s like, really helped. So, like, then, like the norm is work from home, the non-norm is like we get together and then we’re like, oh man, this is awesome. Like, we need to do this more often, actually like, you know, get together and plan and work. But I think we don’t need to be like on top of each other all the time either.

 

Speaker 1 | 30:22.892

Absolutely. Absolutely. Like, that’s, I do believe that there is value in getting together. I do believe there’s value in coming to the office, whatever the office is, you know, kind of thing. You know, seeing your coworkers, seeing other people in the, in the company as well. I think there’s, I think there’s value to that. I also think that sometimes you can get to a decision a lot quicker if you sit at a table together. It is very easy to go, well, you know, we’ve been on this Zoom call for an hour and we hadn’t got anything really decided. Let’s have another Zoom call next week. And then we just keep kicking this can down the road. And when we could have done an hour in a conference room and got this knocked out.

 

Speaker 0 | 31:00.280

Marker boards and marker boards and pizza. Yeah.

 

Speaker 1 | 31:04.083

You know, we can certainly do that. But, you know, like, like for me, this particular company is very lenient with their work from home policy. And so, and I work with some that aren’t. So, I mean, I have to say this particular company, but you know, I require my people to be in three days on one. Pick your three days. Actually, two of them are up to you, one of them is up to our CEO. Um, he does a he does a monthly update for everybody, and he likes everybody in the building. So you get today that I’m telling you when to be in the building two other days. Pick um, and then, yeah. Now on the whole, most of my people are in two to three days a week because I make them, but because they want to be. Yeah, you know, and so it’s, and what I have found, you know, I’m in my third year working here, what I have found here is that that they themselves start coordinating. like, oh, you know, you’re going to be in the office and we need to work on something. I’ll make sure I’m in the office that day. So, so, we can do that. And let’s figure out how to get lunch and, you know, things like that. So it becomes much more of a culture of of, hey, I want to be around my co-workers and, hey, we got problems to solve. And there’s value in, you know, sitting, you know, around a conference table and figuring this out, or sitting at our desks and figuring this out. You know, so it’s a really nice way to do that. And I think that that’s something that every single person that I interview for any job, they always ask about work. How much can I work from home? When can I work from home? How do I get to work?

 

Speaker 0 | 32:30.576

How far away can I work? So do you really care where I’m at as long? Because I have another guy that works for a very big company, Siemens. Amazing, brilliant, brilliant engineer. And he’s like, yeah, you know, I’m hoping they just don’t care that I’m not in Dubai anymore. I’m hoping they’re okay that I’m over here right now. But it’s just kind of an interesting topic. Does work from home work from anywhere? Or is it, no, you have to be geographically somewhere? I’m I’m sure there’s going to be some issues there. Anyways, pay him, give him benefits, work from home. Work from home. What else?

 

Speaker 1 | 33:11.425

Really, those are the big ones. You know, when you find somebody who can, you know, when you find a company that you can work for that meets those things, so that’s generally what people are wanting, at least what I’ve seen out of my interviewing, you generally find a happy employee. And then the next piece of it is. You know, it’s, it’s much more about the, the interviewer and the company itself, than it is about the person you’re trying to fill the seat up. I believe being honest and open about what I expect you to do in your job is huge. Because you find people that go, Oh, I don’t want to do that. Well, I mean, like in my case, I don’t want to code, you know, I mean, obviously we. We’ve reached the point in life that you probably wouldn’t want to let me near a machine to code anyway, but the, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s one of those things where the, you know, the people. I don’t want to sell somebody a bag of goods. That’s not true. I want you to take the job because this is what you want to do. And you want to do it for this company. And you want to do it working for me.

 

Speaker 0 | 34:09.911

What happens when things change?

 

Speaker 1 | 34:12.494

My senior vice president of sales loves to call that promoting them outwardly.

 

Speaker 0 | 34:17.315

I’m just saying, sometimes there’s a, I don’t know, a consolidation, or there’s a, uh, what? there’s a merger and acquisition, or there’s a something and. Look, you were hired for this, but we also need this. Or, I guess it’s kind of a two-part question. First of all, how do you find the right people? Be specific, I guess. It’s like, we need coders to do coding, and it’s really boring coding. I just want to let you know ahead of time, but you can work from home, and you get burritos every Tuesday. Right. And the code needs to be done well and fast, and somewhat bug-free. Okay. The I guess that, but OK, so setting the right expectations. But what happens when things change? Promote. When it happens, when we promote outwardly.

 

Speaker 1 | 35:06.243

You know, so when things change, you know, if it’s, if it’s new job responsibilities, you know, Whenever I’m sitting around, you know, a table. From an executive perspective, looking at that and going, hey, we need to, you know, we’ve got to add this particular skill set to the team or something like that. I generally try to start with who I think is capable to do it. And also generally, between their one-on-ones and reviews and things like that, I’ve heard, oh, I’d like more responsibilities. or, oh, I’m really interested in this thing that we don’t really have right now, but I’ve been studying this. If an opportunity ever comes along.

 

Speaker 0 | 35:40.896

AI, or something. Okay. Exactly. The reason why I’m thinking is because once you’ve done infrastructure as a service, we don’t need an infrastructure guy anymore. So what do we do with him?

 

Speaker 1 | 35:51.280

Right. You move them into other things that they either are passionate about or they want to learn. You know, or, and it absolutely happens, they need to go somewhere else. You know, I had a guy who worked for me several years ago, and his skills were amazing for what he did. And when the direction of the IT department changed, which was 100% my fault, let’s just call it what it was, I had to meet business needs and we had to kind of make a left-hand turn. His skill set did not transfer. And so. You know, we had the conversations of, Hey, we need to, you know, we need to get you some classes. Are you interested in doing this? Those kinds of things. And, and I was hearing, I’m very interested, but the actions were not meeting those words.

 

Speaker 0 | 36:40.958

Exactly. It’s like, it wasn’t a talent. It was like, I’ll do it. I want to, but I cannot do it.

 

Speaker 1 | 36:47.580

Yeah. Or, you know, Oh, I really just don’t want to learn that. Like, I have these skills and they’re valuable. And And, you know, it was a hard conversation to sit him down and go, I understand these skills are valuable. Let me help you find somewhere that your skills are valuable. Like, what you do is very, and honestly, I mean, like, genius at making servers sing and hum. And do all the things they needed to do. And doing it on a shoestring budget, all kinds of things. Like, I mean, genius at making things happen. But I just didn’t need that anymore. And so it was. But I know there’s 10 companies within a three mile radius that do. And so it’s like, let’s find you the right place. He quit in a huff right before Christmas one year, but that’s his own business.

 

Speaker 0 | 37:37.424

Do you think everyone should have some sort of an entrepreneurial mindset in today’s world?

 

Speaker 1 | 37:43.168

Some people, but I don’t think it’s required for all people. Everyone going down this hole, like, oh my gosh, everybody should be an entrepreneur. It’s like, well, that’s great, but… Some people don’t want to be that. Some people want to be told, I need you to do X, Y, and Z. I need it by so-and-so date. Please have this happen. And they will. And it will be on time and perfect and gorgeous, and wrapped with a bow and sitting on my desk.

 

Speaker 0 | 38:04.937

I have realized that so well that I just love taking orders some days. And there’s just some days I wish I could be like, why am I doing this crazy out? Just really a thousand moving parts. I just want to go back to taking orders. Okay. I’m really good at taking orders and executing and doing one or two tasks. really, really well. I’m super add, and that was driving me nuts.

 

Speaker 1 | 38:24.587

Yeah. Yeah. I mean, like, I’ve got, I’ve got a, I’ve got. A business analyst that used to be a huge director for a call center and 10, 15,000 employee kind of situation. And he is really good at project managing and at business analyst. That’s what he really developed a passion for over years, working at his previous company. And then whenever he applied to work. You know, in this, the position that I had, it was, you know, here’s my qualification, here’s my skills. And, you know, we went through that whole entire thing and he was the right person for the job. And the very first thing he tells me is I do not want to be a manager. I do not want to supervise. I do not want to be a director. Not what I want to do anymore in my life. And I went, great, because I don’t need you to do those things. You know, and he’s worked for me now for about two and a half years or so. And, and about 30 days ago, he goes, if you ever need somebody to supervise. Probably at a point where I could think about doing it, I might be able to mentally handle it. Yeah, and I’m like, great, I will keep that in mind, you know? And and then, like, you know, on the other hand, like, I’ve got a I’ve got a newly minted project manager that came on as an operations business analyst. Like he, he started, you know, doing business processes for me and documenting them and and getting them into shape and streamlining them and all that stuff. With, you know, Six, Sigma and Lean, and, you know, pick the next buzzword of the year. And, uh, and he went through all that and then goes, I’ve always wanted to be a project manager and I’m willing to go, do and put in the work. And I went, great, go get your PMP and we’ll have that conversation. And in November of last year, he walked into my office and goes, here’s my PMP. I went, fantastic. We’ll make it happen. Like, beautiful. Like, you know, I need this. You fill the need. We can move you into those kind of things.

 

Speaker 0 | 40:13.343

That’s my old nickname, fill the need. I’m serious. It is. It’s been outstanding. Yeah. I wish I could summarize. I wish I could summarize what the entity is, but I guess what it is is. There’s some people that are just, we’re all naturally good at certain things. And you said, you said, I’ve just been lucky, but it’s really not luck. What I’ve found is that it’s, it’s something that every, if you’re in the right position or you’re in the right place, if you’re doing what you’re doing. And you feel like, dude, this is just common sense. Like, I, I really am not special at whatever this is, But everyone else looks to it and they’re like, no, you don’t understand you are. Like, if it’s just like, I don’t know, it just seems like common sense and like, really easy to me. Trust me, it’s. It’s really not a big deal what I do. And um, that’s, you know, you know what I mean, like that, and you’re kind of like. So for me, sometimes it’s like people coming, they’re always coming to me asking about business ideas and I’m like, Ah, no, it’s garbage. No, definitely don’t do that. Nope, don’t do it. Nope, nope, nope. I’m just like the business. Like, shoot down guy like, No, are you sure you want to? Like, you want to open up a restaurant? No, let me tell you what a restaurant you’re going to be counting. Slices of pepperoni at the end of the night, slices of bacon. You’re going to have to count all this food. You’re going to have to do the schedule. You’re going to have to do this. You’re going to hate cooking. You’re doing it because you want to cook? No, you’re going to hate cooking. No, you’re going to hate life. Trust me. You’re going to have to do this. You’re going to have to do this. You’re going to have to work hours. You’re going to have leftover food. You’re going to have to throw it away. You’re going to have to donate this. There’s going to be shrinkage. Order the paper products, but wrong cups are going to come. You’re going to have to go somewhere else and get cups, and everyone’s mad because they’re in line waiting for the medium cups, and you only have small cups. Yeah, I used to work for Starbucks. books. I was like,

 

Speaker 1 | 41:54.552

I know this is going somewhere.

 

Speaker 0 | 41:58.953

Trust me. It’s, trust me. I don’t want to manage people anymore. Trust me. I don’t want to manage people. I don’t want to do this. I just want to stand behind the coffee machine, make coffee and talk with everyone that comes up. That you’re making their day happy. Because now they’ve got a bunch of caffeine in them and they want to go home. So I understand that guy. I really do. I really do. It’s been a pleasure having you on the show. Any, anything that any one thing like, really. Mind blowing thing that you’ve learned over the career, over your career, that you want to share with someone? Maybe it’s like a teaching moment or something like, I don’t know. I don’t know. What is it?

 

Speaker 1 | 42:31.069

Treat everybody like you treat yourself. I, you know, there is no one that is that. I get, okay, I guess, two pieces of advice, treat everybody decent. I treat the janitor the same way I treat the CEO. You know, it’s, it just is what it is. It takes you, it takes you really far in this.

 

Speaker 0 | 42:48.502

I might treat the janitor better, to be honest with you. And I was like, I’m like, head janitor. That’s what I signed paperwork on when they’re like, Hey, can you, you need to sign, authorizes some head janitor. Yep.

 

Speaker 1 | 42:59.085

No, it’s, you know, it, it, you know, you, you, you get a long way doing that. You get a lot of, um, I’ve found over the years, you get a lot of respect doing it. Because it’s, it’s not, I’m not better than anybody else. I have a position that is what it is, but I, I’m not better than anybody. Uh, and then the other thing that I think is, is, is a really big, It was a huge turning point for me early in my career. And a CEO said it to me. He goes, Kevin, I get up and do the same thing that you do every morning. I put my pants on the exact same way. And I mean, there’s a hundred thousand jokes. I’m like, well, then, I mean, obviously you just get out of bed and jump into a pair of pants.

 

Speaker 0 | 43:30.874

I just get out of bed because my pants are still on from the night before.

 

Speaker 1 | 43:35.495

You know, so it, but, but I mean, that was one of those things that, like, it was eyeopening to me. It was like, well, you know, yes, you know, they are the CEO of a company and they signed my paycheck. They could fire me at any second. But they’re human. They’re the same person, too. Like, they’ve been in the game longer. They have a different position. That was their path in life. So, I mean, I really would say those two things like, I, you know, I’m not particularly scared of, you know, a board of directors, or a CEO, or, you know, some vice president. Because, you know, I mean, especially when you’re on, like, the help desk, or you’re an engineer or something like that, they’ll have to go, oh, oh, well, the CEO wants this done right now. Well, that’s great. And if the CEO can do it right now, he can come over here and do that. I’m going to guess he can. Because he’s the CEO of this company.

 

Speaker 0 | 44:17.704

So you’re not, no, I hold the passwords.

 

Speaker 1 | 44:21.065

Like, you know, I mean, but then that whole, you know, then there’s the other side of that coin, you know, being that cocky, arrogant it guy doesn’t get you very far. It gets you on the street. But, you know, so, I mean, those are the two things that have been eye-opening for me and really helped me in my career. I would definitely say, treat everybody really well. And everybody puts their pants on the same way.

 

Speaker 0 | 44:44.018

Uh, that, that one’s actually really, really important because, um, a lot of people get scared of, like, the hierarchy or something like that. They get stressed out, they have anxiety. And in reality, you’ve got to be able to go connect and connect, discover, respond with people. And you have to understand that the, whatever the C level executives, the executives are probably, um, under a crap ton of stress. And they would really love somebody. They would really love somebody to ask them. Um, when it comes to the I.T department, what’s your single biggest frustration, problem or concern? or what’s your anxiety? What’s really keeping you up at night? What? What can we help you with? That’s really what that person wants, because they have a way more responsibility and load sitting on them than you could possibly imagine. Because they’ve got all these people that they’re responsible for, they’re responsible for all their lives, they’re responsible for their families. Um, and it’s actually quite a, quite a heavy load for a lot of people that have ever been in a leadership position. If you are responsible for other people’s lives, if you fail, you’ve failed all these other people. So, um, that’s why a lot of people just say, no, I just look, I just. I want a job. And I want to clock in and clock out and talk with you guys and have fun and connect. I don’t want that, it’s too much for some people. Yep, absolutely, absolutely, yeah, you know, I mean, honestly, like, I have found that. A lot of CEOs, you know, especially earlier

 

Speaker 1 | 46:00.967

in my IT career, like it was, you know you, you had CEOs that would, or, you know, just higher level people, higher level on the ORG chart, vice presidents and whatever. Um, go, oh, you know, I just, I just, I didn’t just go make this happen, that’s your job to figure it out. And and we absolutely all of us listening to this can shake their head and go, Yeah, I knew that. And we all, we all do. And uh. But realistically, if you take a step back from that, it’s. They don’t necessarily know how to solve it, they don’t want to solve it. And and like what you said, they have much, much, much bigger issues to worry about. Um, and and they need, you know, in this case, the IT guy, to go just solve this problem and come back when there, when there is a solution, um, you know, and, and I’ve made a career out of doing that. So I’m happy with that.

 

Speaker 0 | 46:46.056

Yeah. I mean, the Lord above help them. Yeah. Cause that’s usually where that type of thing comes from is high level anxiety and stuff. And yeah. Yeah. Well, there really are some, there really are some jerks out there.

 

Speaker 1 | 46:57.423

Oh, of course there are. I mean, that you’re going to run up against those all the time. and, you know, and And, you know, I mean, I’ve worked for him. I do say frequently, I’ve learned more from bad bosses than I have good bosses. And generally, that’s just how not to be them, to be honest.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:12.956

I learned nothing from that good boss. What’s his name again?

 

Speaker 1 | 47:18.120

Years and years and years. I mean, we’re talking going on 20 years now. I had a boss. He worked in Virginia and I was in North Carolina. He flew in on my first day and he goes, I just. The first words out of my mouth I need to tell you is I cannot do your job. I do not know how to do your, that’s why I hired you.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:35.293

I don’t know if it’s a good thing or a bad thing. It’s kind of cool. Actually.

 

Speaker 1 | 47:38.175

It was great. Like, we,

 

Speaker 0 | 47:39.656

that’s awesome.

 

Speaker 1 | 47:40.576

We were going to have our interactions. Like it was, I need you to be the expert that I hired you to be. And then he, you know, he took me to lunch, and then he flew back to Virginia.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:49.181

That’s pretty sweet.

 

Speaker 1 | 47:50.022

So I’m once a year on my review, he was a happy person, you know, you know, it was great. It was great.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:58.326

This probably to the second part of the AI part of the show, which is How do we use? um, how do we use? My happy place is clawed. When it comes to writing stuff for for my for, like any type of, uh, I don’t know, writing stuff. And I was trying to find, um, I was like, can you, can you come up with, uh, like, 10 ideas for for for memes for like it? Leadership? And I can’t remember what it was, and and AI, and hype and Gartner and all the can you mix it all together? And I can’t remember what the long prompt was, and it came up with, um, I’d say, Oh, I know it’s it. Leadership’s, uh, like speaking to the to the board and convincing with, convincing executive management to invest in the budget. But you can’t be technical. And you know, it was like it was like you must use at least one sports metaphor per every like, like complicated it, like, you know, explanation, like. It was like. We need to upgrade the ERP to do this to the API. For the whatever is it, you must put that into a sports metaphor, right? Cannot do your job and you do not know how to do your job. But we can talk a lot about the Dallas Cowboys. Kevin, been a pleasure. pleasure having you on the show. We want you back. We want you to give us updates on, I don’t know, any of these new things that have come about. And maybe it’s the AI future or something. Anything for us before we go?

 

Speaker 1 | 49:25.656

No, I really appreciate it. Thank you so much for the opportunity and would love to be back whenever you want to hear from me again.

 

359- Implementing AI With Kevin Kuttin

Speaker 0 | 00:00.744

Kevin Kooten, everyone. Welcome back to dissecting popular it Nerds. This is like a soft start today and works for Regenesis, a pain, I guess, a medical equipment manufacturing, remove pain without the drugs type of thing, which is, I’m sure your marketing department would love that, how I just, how I ripped that off, you know what I mean? Don’t need the drugs, I’m here. Yeah,

 

Speaker 1 | 00:23.804

well, no, that’s it. I mean, like, I mean, this really is, you know, It’s marketed at AT Veterans specifically to help with the, you know, an alternative to the opioids. You know, so they, you know, they don’t have a lot of with those goods. In general, not a lot of people have a lot of good reactions with it. There’s a ton of side effects. And so this is one of those things where where our device is basically equivalent. Now I don’t work in the regulatory department, so I don’t. I don’t sell this for a living. So I’m probably saying things that are very wrong. But,

 

Speaker 0 | 00:57.781

Uh,

 

Speaker 1 | 00:58.741

it’s, uh, you know, this is not medical advice and I am not a salesperson. Um, but the, uh, you know, it’s, uh, it’s one of those things where it works, uh, basically equivocally. To help, you know, get, you know, pain management and to give these people their, their lives back. Uh, so it’s, uh, it’s really great. Like, I, I, I think it’s, uh, I think it’s a really great cause, and I think it’s a really great company to work with. So,

 

Speaker 0 | 01:21.490

and, and the only reason why is because I went down to Dark Hole the other day. because, um, for those of you listening, I did a lot of Brazilian jiu-jitsu, surfing and lifting in my days. And I don’t know, it’s taking its toll. And yeah, so I have a C7, C6 herniated disc. Probably what looks like also a C6, C5 now. And I have been in like excruciating pain. And the worst thing you can probably do is go on a Reddit forum and start looking at other people with back pain. Because you’ve got a lot of people that are like, I want to kill myself. I’m not kidding you. I’m not kidding you. It’s bad. If you’ve ever had back pain. pain. It’s, it’s really bad. And, uh, and people like, yeah, just become a heroin addict. It’s like, for real, because that’s the only choice that you have. And, uh, so I don’t know, I’m, you guys can send one of these to me if you want to let me know how I can buy this thing. I’m not that bad yet. Really. I mean, I, I, I hope I never get that bad, but it’s, you know, there’s days where I was like, I’ve never experienced pain like this before. So this is an IT show, however, and, uh, this is a, but it guys have bad posture. So the other thing is what really causes, probably not jujitsu and surfing, all those things that probably actually did me some good. Um, it’s probably sitting in a desk all day, hunched over bad posture, using cell phones and things like this. Which is this now? This is how we make the this, how we make the connection. So please tell me how you got into this? Um, I want your story. Let’s go back to story time. How’d you get into this thing? What was your first computer? I don’t know, life-altering experience with, um, a Nintendo or something.

 

Speaker 1 | 02:51.679

Oh my gosh. It was… Oh gosh, it was a long time ago, in a land far, far away. Uh, that, uh, the honestly, I mean, I got into to computers and stuff just because, um, well, with, uh. With my grandfather. We used to. On Friday nights, we used to, uh, go to, uh. My grandparents, uh, my grandmas would go shopping and I would go to, uh. Barrel of fun. Which was an arcade that was right outside the particular department store, or they love to shop in. And so we’d go and do that. And whenever he had enough of me, you know, spending thousands of dollars for a 25 set spider ring, we would go across the way to Radio Shack. They existed way back in the day. And, you know, and I played with the computers there, and it was, it was minesweeper was like the big, gigantic thing. And, of course, there were some other little, little games out there. Tetris, I think was one, you know, kind of, they always had one up. You know, kind of in an area they knew kids were going to come in and play and stuff like that. So, um, so it was getting into it that way, uh, and and really finding a love of it, and then that just grew over time. Um, and uh, yeah, I mean. And along the way, I found things I don’t like about computers, like, I’m I’m not a programmer, it’s, it’s not my thing. I mean, when I went to college, that was a bunch of classes were programming, and, uh, and I, this is not what I’m good at. I mean, like, I can do it. I often tell people there’s not seven-figure paychecks that make me do that. So they usually back off of that real quick. But, you know, what I have a passion for is the administrative side, the server side. And I’ve come to it the long way. I mean, I started on the help desk and moved from help desk to systems admin to handling the servers themselves. From more of an engineering perspective. And then got into… Business continuity and disaster recovery. And being an exchange admin for a while. And uh, and then eventually moved into managing, uh, international help desks for for one of our companies, and uh. And then kept on moving into management. And and now I’m here. I sit an executive director of a biomedical company in the IT department. So yay, I know that’s just how it is, you know, I was a writing major,

 

Speaker 0 | 05:09.011

I was, I, I minored in poetry. Um, and here I am. And, uh, I remember seeing the people with the C plus plus thick books in their rooms. I was like, what’s that? I was like, I don’t know, but it’s not what I’m doing, but here I am. The, you know, there’s this, you mentioned this interesting gap. When we, uh, when we sift and sort and try to find, um, the right IT leaders to have on the show, you mentioned to this, uh, a gap. And I noticed it even more yesterday when we had our very secret. AI use case form without the vendor hype, whatever we want to call that. But the gap that has been, I think this gap that you spoke about, the gap maybe between what you had mentioned was. There’s a gap between kind of the old technology people and the new technology people. The new technology? People have no clue really where the internet came from, or any of that. They don’t know. Maybe they do. I’m just making that up. They might say, How dare you? Of course, I studied that. But never maybe kind of experienced the dawn of this new era, which really isn’t that long ago. What is frustrating or difficult about that?

 

Speaker 1 | 06:13.718

Well, you know, I mean, it is interesting because I’ve got people that work for me, that haven’t come through all of that. So, like Case in point, one of the guys that works for me is my cloud engineer, and he’s brilliant at the cloud. Part of it. And, uh, and he understands the server, part of it for our physical servers that are still on site. But whenever you have to go back and hunt down bigger issues that are deeper and wider and more nuanced, that’s kind of where it falls apart. And that’s not, he’ll end up listening to this and be so mad at me.

 

Speaker 0 | 06:52.987

Let’s bring our senior by, get him on the mic right now.

 

Speaker 1 | 06:57.429

Luckily, he is working from home today. The uh, whenever he listens to this, he will come into my office and slap me, but the uh, um, you know, it’s, uh. It’s one of those things where, you know, when you kind of dive into the server side of things and really get further back into. You know, server architecture. And and you know, where Windows has come from over the years. Especially, uh, you know, a problem that he can’t find a solution to. I can eventually get there. I’m not going to say I can do it in five minutes, but you know, it’s, uh, we can get to those points. Why can’t I do it in five minutes?

 

Speaker 0 | 07:33.402

No, yeah, yeah. Why can you do something that he can’t? And obviously, he can do many things that you cannot do. That’s why you’re in the position you’re in, leadership.

 

Speaker 1 | 07:42.587

Absolutely. Plus, you know, and I think it’s because I’ve come through, you know.

 

Speaker 0 | 07:48.852

But it’s got to be something like, did you think about this? Did you think about this? And he’s like, oh, I didn’t know that even existed. Or, I mean, what is it, you know?

 

Speaker 1 | 07:55.455

You know, it’s that, it’s, it’s, you know, oh, you know, I remember that we had this problem way back when, and there’s this setting over here in IIS that we need to go flip. And it’s like, well, we’re not even using IIS on that server. I know, but that’s where the setting happens to be, like, you know, kind of thing. You know, so it’s things like that. And, you know, like we had a, when we were trying to get Windows Hello to work for our full enterprise, our certificates just were not working. And it took me going back. To some very old notes for some very far away companies to go. So lotus nuts, maybe some lotus here, exactly like here, here’s where these, uh, you know, here’s where these this certificate problem might be coming from. And then, lo and behold, after working on it for three days, it was like, Oh, yep, that was it. And found it and now we can actually move forward. Um, weird, you know, it’s, it’s knowing, you know, it’s, it’s not, there’s. There’s nothing wrong with with the knowledge that people are coming into to the business with, I mean, it, and it’s, and it’s not their fault. Because, you know, people are much more cloud-centric now and much more virtualized now. And you’re, you know, you’re removing the the back end works of a server from, you know? Now they just get an admin center to go to. I’m going to go to this website and I’m going to configure these settings and it either does or doesn’t work. And you know, I mean, and I know that, like Microsoft and AWS and all them. Do a whole bunch of coding under the hood

 

Speaker 0 | 09:20.271

to just make that little radio button or that checkbox work. Oh, that weird, that’s a still blows my mind. yeah, it blows my mind if you actually saw, well, first, I want to get off talking because I bet you I, there’s something popping into my mind. That would just be like, this great session for a show, and, uh, or, I mean, section for the show. And I’ll be like, I bet you, there’s a prompt for that, I bet you there’s a prompt for you, like an A I prompt for that. And it would have to be one of those scenario ones where you’re, like, pretend you’re an old it guy. They grew up in it from back in the day. You worked on all these servers and you knew, and you worked on Windows, this, this, and this. And this is your current problem. Where do you think it could be? I wonder if that would work. I wonder if you could figure that out.

 

Speaker 1 | 10:00.751

Good question. Like, I have not thought about that. That is quite a possibility.

 

Speaker 0 | 10:04.695

I wonder. We should try that out. If we’re doing this show live like we should be right now, which we’re getting. By the way, everyone listening, you’ve got to go follow us on YouTube. Never done YouTube. I think we got nine followers. Okay. We’ve got, I’ve got 17,000 on LinkedIn, nine on YouTube. Okay. And I’m thinking we’ve got a few thousand on our LinkedIn page. So go follow YouTube right now. And the reason why you should do that is this is gonna be really cool. And you can get on these live panels and it’ll be fun. And we’ll talk about crazy things and people will see the, this guy that’s speaking right now. My name is Phil Howard. You’ll see me in the real live flesh and we’ll do it live on YouTube. And we’ll do things like Who’s got the prompt? What’s the prompt right now? We’ll have, like the prompt team, and I don’t know, maybe we could just figure out this prompt right now. You’re a I.T. guy that was born sub 1980. I hope I didn’t just make you too old sub 1985. You look younger, there you go, you look younger than me. Uh, so it’s up 1985 and you had experience with, I don’t know. In college. People were doing C plus, plus, you were around at the invention of email. And, uh, you know things that other people don’t know. This is the problem going on. How pretend to be this person, I don’t know. Fix it that. Just to me, that would be really cool and kind of completely forgot where we were going with that other thing before this. But uh, there was another, there was another segue to something really cool. But that would have been like the section of the show that we didn’t do. Called What’s the prompt for that? what’s the AI prompt for that? So so this gap is interesting, so we have this big gap, we have the gap between the old school and the new school. And you’re gonna get slapped later for that. Probably. Uh, uh, Uh, no, One other thing that made me think about this whole thing, when you mentioned the AWS and the cloud, remember the cloud, remember when the cloud was important, if you notice how, like vendors and salespeople in marketing, we just, when something gets old, we just change the name for it. For example, it’s no longer the cloud, it’s, um, I a a S, or infrastructure as a service. Yep. What the hell is that? Oh, that’s by the way, we just had to change the name because, uh, I don’t know, the clouds old now. So now we’re going to call it infrastructure as a service. Which I think is the same thing. Isn’t it the same thing as the cloud, or is it a little bit more nuanced?

 

Speaker 1 | 12:12.360

I think it’s really the same thing. I mean, you know, at the end of the day, some marketing person got paid a lot of money to figure that out.

 

Speaker 0 | 12:18.183

And- he just copied UCAS, Unified Communications as a Service, which used to be, what did UCAS used to be?

 

Speaker 1 | 12:24.306

Oh, I, this is what, VoIP?

 

Speaker 0 | 12:27.027

Exactly, voice over, yeah, and then we have the the vote p, we have the the vote people of the world, all you I core people out there. That when you came up and their voip wasn’t strong yet and there was no uh, qos on the internet, everything they called, Oh no, we’re vote P, we’re voicing. Private Tinder we need to buy. You have to buy an expensive MPLS circuit in order for our crap to work. Um, but we’re gonna make it sound like it’s no, no, no, don’t go voip, never go voip, you gotta go vote p, voice over, private. Sorry, that’s just. Was hilarious. The things that I’ve seen people come up with over what’s the what’s the craziest thing you’ve ever seen someone try to sell you? It was like, really like, like it was, you were being sold. The I don’t know newest Millennium Falcon, but it was really like, I don’t know, not, the Millennium Falcon’s really old now. So I don’t know what. You know, you were being sold a Lamborghini, but it was really a, I don’t know, 1987, Nova.

 

Speaker 1 | 13:28.231

In green, um, no go in Spanish, which is why it’s, Oh my god, the uh, you know, I, I’m. I’m not really recalling anything major like like that, but I. But I will tell you, I just. I just came back from a from a Microsoft Fabric conference up in Vegas, uh, and it was a great conference. Highly recommend it for for those in the community that that you know need the information or using in your business. But um, the interesting thing that I found a lot of vendors up there trying to sell was they wanted to make it their spin and how they had the secret sauce on something to do. In FabricPic, whatever your favorite thing is, Power Bi, or the actual fabric itself, or SQL or whatever, Azure database, or whatever the case may be. And they wanted to sell you their secret sauce. And when you took just half a second and looked at their secret sauce. All they were doing was using what you already have access to in fabric or Power BI, or whichever program of interest you were looking at. They were just implementing it for you, but calling it something fabulous and wonderful. And it’s like this. I can go click the box, too, it’s fine. Like, yeah, that could have been banged out in a in a white paper. Yeah, absolutely, you know, I mean. And it wasn’t even like the it wasn’t like the fast track type stuff. Like, okay, you have none of this. And we’re going to come in and help you, you know, get your data in place and figure it out. So I think I think those are wonderful, very valuable tools, I’ve taken advantage of them many times. But, um, you know, literally marketing to me, I’m going to, you know, this secret sauce thing. And it’s like, yeah, that’s a checkbox. That’s a script that’s readily available on the internet that I can run myself. Like that kind of stuff. It’s like, no, I don’t need to pay you thousands, upon thousands, upon thousands of dollars to do something I can do.

 

Speaker 0 | 15:18.339

Isn’t that the same thing with AI now? Isn’t there like, a big difference between, like, a learning model or a language model, and just someone else’s spin on prompting? And then we just stamped it out on our website and did it as an add-on, as a product?

 

Speaker 1 | 15:31.307

I think that that is beginning to happen. I mean, people are seeing a great way to be able to use that. I mean, you know, and we’re seeing that.

 

Speaker 0 | 15:38.513

It’s more legitimate there, maybe, than this other thing, because there is a lot.

 

Speaker 1 | 15:43.918

Oh, yeah.

 

Speaker 0 | 15:44.639

And someone could, you could, I mean, I think it’s more someone you would hire someone for. Like, I need an AI automation expert or something. Is there such a title yet? Like, automation guy?

 

Speaker 1 | 15:57.009

They’re definitely coming. That’s for sure. I mean, you know, AI, as we know it now, is, you know, still in its infancy. And it’s coming around. But, you know, but I think that’s why those things exist. Like, people are, I mean, people are scared of it. Like, you know, I mean, I’m lucky that I work for a company that’s all, you know, Gung ho about using it. And, you know, of course, how do we use it with all the right regulations and all that kind of stuff. But, you know, coming from actually just talking to people at that conference a few weeks ago, like, it’s companies that are scared to death. Of using it. And, you know, it’s like, oh my gosh, this is gonna, you know, this is gonna take all of our data and give it to Google or Microsoft, or wherever, or they’re just gonna just post it on the internet. It’s like, no, that’s not how it really works. I mean, yeah, you could go rogue and do some things, but that’s not really how it works. And like those kinds of things. So, like, I mean, I think that there absolutely is, you know, a coming age of the, some of it is snake oil salesmen. For like, oh, I’ve created this prompt and it can do all these things for you. Well, all they did was just load the knowledge in. Kind of thing. I mean, and there’s value in that. But it’s going to be very interesting to watch all of this continue to morph and change over the next several years. As it really takes hold and goes crazy. We are going to end up with people who are AI prompting engineers or AI engineers or whatever it will turn into.

 

Speaker 0 | 17:20.624

Yeah, just someone really good at using all of the tools, and I don’t know, maybe we’ll get them up.

 

Speaker 1 | 17:26.375

Column Operations He’ll be, he’ll be under operations. Yeah, one of the things that I think is going to be interesting to see. Um, you know, because now you’re getting to the point where you can ask it to do code for you and then take that code and turn it into something else. So, like, I could say, you know, I could use an AI agent in my SQL database and say, Hey, I want you to spit me out this information. And then it gives me that table of information with all the the inner joins and outer joins and all that kind of crazy stuff. And then take that same code and go drop it into an AI bot for Power Bi and go, now make me a report off of it. Which, fantastic. That is such a time saver and really great way to do things. But back to our earlier conversation, talking about the difference between older engineers and new engineers, the future ones aren’t even going to know how to use the website to click the button. It’s going to be, well, I couldn’t tell the AI agent that because it didn’t work, and I don’t know how to make that work. Like, oh, okay. We’re going to end up in a new situation. We may not get that bad. It’s going to be a new and different learning gap.

 

Speaker 0 | 18:33.812

Why wouldn’t we get that lazy? I think it’s going to be a matter of like, no, but really, I think it’s going to be a matter of creativity. Is the uncreative person going to just, you know, what’s going to happen?

 

Speaker 1 | 18:44.361

It’s going to be interesting. The uncreative person is going to.

 

Speaker 0 | 18:50.927

I don’t know, be become the mediocre engineer, I guess I, I don’t know. I mean, it’s just going to be, it’s, it’s really quite. Um, um, and then the I. The gap might be, the gap might grow larger between America and other just other countries in general. Like, I’m in, uh, I’m in Morocco right now, in one of our studios in Morocco. Because I have. And what’s interesting is the reason why I’m here is because I did hire, um, an AI and development team here. They’re all expats. Uh, you know, Greg’s from from France, he’s got a beautiful French accent, and he’s like, ridiculously on top of. Like, every new thing that comes out in a I don’t even know, like, I know that, like, the whole podcast is like, kind of automated, like the production process. And there’s like all these gears running on a single pane of glass somewhere. And this app is using this app, and there’s we don’t even use Zapier anymore because it’s some other thing that’s, you know, um, so he’s a genius at that. And it would take, uh, it’s something that would normally take, you know, probably numerous people. I don’t know what to do. Or would just take longer, it would just take longer, kind of more, and it’s more time to do things. Uh, so. But then I walk out and I walk down the street and I look, and I go into a store and I realize there’s no receipts, there’s no POS system, there’s no computer. I look at a construction material being delivered, I look at things doing this, there’s no ERP system, there’s none of that. It’s old books and papers and pens writing. And, uh, I just see the gap. the gap could get very large for some places. Yeah,

 

Speaker 1 | 20:27.376

absolutely, I definitely think that’s going to happen. Um, you know, it’s it. AI is getting to be so pervasive, especially with going in like your iPhone. And now obviously with with Google’s piece of it and it going into Android. And and and everybody seems to be coming up with their own flavor of AI. But it’s going to be very interesting to see how it plays out globally. Is China or America, or both, going to become very popular with AI? And then it’s going to be kind of the way of the future. And then other emerging countries, from a technology perspective, are not nearly as quick. And it’s going to be a much larger gap. Or are they going to all of a sudden just go from ostensibly the dark ages to current modern infrastructure? It’s a very interesting thing that may happen to us.

 

Speaker 0 | 21:22.679

You mentioned mentoring, and I guess I’d be curious to see how you the space in general, the IT leadership space in general. How is all of this affecting the temperature or the aura? I’m trying to think of the right word. The the market space of I.T leadership jobs, or the job space, and what? What would your advice be to other I.T leaders that may be worried about? I don’t know, getting a new job, finding a job, uh, finishing a career up, growing in their career. Are we? Is there like, there’s something going on right now, you know, I I think a lot of requests lately, I’m getting a lot of requests lately for, um, just, you know, It just seems like the job market, like the IT job market, is kind of in a weird position right now. I don’t, I don’t want to say negative. I don’t want to go too negative. It’s bad and people are losing their jobs and the and the, you know, the pay is going down and all of this. But that’s kind of what I’m hearing.

 

Speaker 1 | 22:23.556

You know, I think, I mean, just just looking at things and kind of keeping my ear to the ground, just in terms of having to hire people to to work for me over various projects. Doing or stuff like that and then just talking to people you know in the industry through, you know, various channels, the It it. We have come to an interesting time. Um, though, seemingly everyone says that about every March, April, May, because all of a sudden Q1 budgets are released. People got their um, people got their bonuses, people, you know, didn’t get a raise, didn’t get a bonus, whatever. They’re looking to jump ship, those kind of things, and so, like, everything fluctuates about right now anyway. Um, you know, good or bad it, you know, it kind of operates right now, it’s that job, that great job. Change, jump, period of time, yeah, you know, seasonally kind of thing, but then I think, you know, the the. The bigger things that are going on in the world are all of a sudden. These I.T guys that are being dumped out of Facebook and Google and and Meta, and all of the, you know, the big giant silicone companies that, um, you know, they’re all of a sudden they’ve hit the streets. and, you know, and it’s true, you know, they’re not commanding the $250,000, $300,000, $400,000 salaries when now there’s a glut of these people on the market. And it’s like, oh, well, I work for Google or I work for Facebook. Well, that’s great. It’s super nice. We’re not those people.

 

Speaker 0 | 23:49.058

What did you do there? Did you get a ticket for the men’s hand dryer in the bathroom that needs to be flipped?

 

Speaker 1 | 23:55.619

You know, that is obviously happening. Um, and, and I think that that is changing the market to a degree, you know, But at the end of the day, talent is still talent. And, you know, when you can find the right person for your job that has the, you know, the right skillset, um, you know, be that soft skills. or, um, you know, you, you’re willing to pay for that. Now, I mean, that’s not saying that, you know, you know, we’re all going to go break our budget all of a sudden, but, um, you know, I, I think that, that being honest, whenever you’re, you know, setting up a a salary range for a job is very good. And then using your salary range, you know, like, if I make, you know, our finance department and our human resources department. Aware that, you know, hey, the range for this job is, I don’t know, let’s say 70 to 100. And I find the right candidate, and I got to pay them 99. Well, we’re going to pay them 99. Like, that’s what we’re going to do. You know, it’s, but then we have a, you know, we have an employee that’s satisfied. We have an employee that’s happy. They’re producing good work. They want to stay with the company. Like, I have longevity. I don’t have a two-year hop. Like, it’s. You know, you, you, I don’t have somebody trying to, uh, do my job and look for the next job that pays them more money, kind of thing, you know you. You have a much better, you know, quality of work out of that person. They’re also much happier with their their job and so they have a quality life and all those kind of things. Um, you know, but. But that also is to say you have to keep learning and understanding what’s going on in the world. That doesn’t necessarily mean certifications or going back to school to get a, you know, your MBA. Or put it this way,

 

Speaker 0 | 25:34.349

let’s put it this way. What do most people come to you for advice on? I don’t even care if it’s not it related, but you’ve got, there’s, there’s people that come to me and they always come to me for certain things. And what do they come to you for when they come to you? What do they come for? What do they ask?

 

Speaker 1 | 25:52.474

How can we fix this problem with our employee? How can we get the right person in the right seat? What do to keep the, keep them happy.

 

Speaker 0 | 26:00.152

Okay. So what do you do to keep people happy? What’s the, what’s the typical like scenario, like, what’s going on? Well,

 

Speaker 1 | 26:04.996

it’s paying them what they’re worth. That starts, you know, everybody wants money. Then the next one is, is, you know, it really centers around a work-life balance and benefits, and, and, you know, and, and it moves beyond, you know, work-life balance. You know, we, we all talk about it, but, but finding a company that actually follows what they, you know,

 

Speaker 0 | 26:21.905

what is work-life balance? Like, what is it really? Is it, I can do whatever the heck I want, whenever I want. And if I feel like working today, I will. I mean, what is it? I mean,

 

Speaker 1 | 26:29.069

  1. I don’t think that we’ve gone that far yet. Um, that’s the idea, that’s the ideal. Yeah, yeah, yeah, sure, that’s the ideal. Um, you know, but. But I mean, I think it. Um, you know, the work-life balance is obviously something that that works for everybody, you know, like, I mean, if I’ve got, you know, an employee that needs to go to a doctor’s appointment at 11 o’clock in the morning. I don’t need them to take eight hours of PTO to do that, I need you to go to your doctor’s appointment and we’ll figure it out. You know, like it’s not the end of life. Uh, you know, you being gone for an hour isn’t making or breaking anything, especially, you know, I mean, obviously I’m talking about good performing employees here. I’m not talking about, you know, the problem shot.

 

Speaker 0 | 27:03.588

The guy that has a doctor’s appointment every other day.

 

Speaker 1 | 27:07.470

Exactly. You know, like the, you know, we’re going to figure it out, you know, Because I feel like, whenever you have a work-life balance, it, you, you watch the clock less, you know, and that’s not to say that, you know, you know, I want you to give me something that, you know, you’re not getting paid for. I don’t want that by any stretch, but. But if you’re working on a project, it’s like, okay, it is a slam laptop shut at five o’clock. It’s like, okay, well, I got to work on this for about another hour. And you do kind of thing. It’s like, great, fantastic. That’s wonderful. Pay,

 

Speaker 0 | 27:36.509

work-life balance, pay them what they’re worth, work-life balance. So that they actually do enjoy kind of what they’re doing, which is probably another thing is, how do you make sure people enjoy what they’re doing? I guess it’s make sure the right people are in the right seat. Absolutely. Okay, benefits. Yeah. Why are people coming to you for this?

 

Speaker 1 | 27:55.416

Cause we seem to do it pretty well over here.

 

Speaker 0 | 27:58.357

Okay. Okay.

 

Speaker 1 | 27:59.077

You know, it’s, it, it’s, it’s one of those things where one, one of the things that I’ve been, I say, I’m lucky. I certainly don’t think that I’ve been the, I don’t think that I’ve, you know, cornered the market on any secret sauce, by any stretch, but, um, you know, I’ve got a lot of employees over the years that, that have either followed or, you know, wanted recommendations on where to go work. or, or, you know, I’ve been able to, you know. Say their names whenever they weren’t even in the room and go, oh, you know who you should call, you should call this person that they can, they can probably help you out. Like, you know, whether you hire them or not, at least go give them an interview. They’re, they’re worth your time. Um, you know, that kind of thing. And then, you know, like I, I’ve been incredibly lucky, you know, in my last two or three jobs. That we, we’ve had a pretty good retention rate, um, that, you know, has done much better than the overall company’s retention. Um, because I believe in those things, pay them what they’re worth, give them a work-life balance. And then, you know, it’s, it’s benefits beyond just, you know, health and dental and medical, and, you know, those kinds of things. It’s, you know, those are kind of table stakes. It really starts coming to work at home and working remotely. And that’s a big one in the IT world. I mean,

 

Speaker 0 | 29:09.430

and we all sit here. Oh, you know, that’s huge. It’s huge. I was going to say, taco Tuesdays, but you just said, work at home.

 

Speaker 1 | 29:14.793

Yeah. You know, taco Tuesdays is great, too. But should the. You know, it’s working at home, working remote. I mean, like, we’ve all said it for years. I absolutely have said it. Why do I have to be in this office where you can see me? And then guaranteed some. VP’s answer always is, well, that’s where the servers are. Obviously, you don’t know where the servers are. They’re three and a half hours away from here, behind a locked door in another building.

 

Speaker 0 | 29:36.326

I do find a case. I do find so all of my guys are pretty much remote, but we have an office. It’s kind of like a, like a, what do you call it? Like, one of those like… Offices where you can come and go, do whatever you want. We’ve got other people that come, like sometimes their friends come like, Hey, who are you? like, Okay, you know, um? But what I have found is that even if we just get together once a quarter for like a week or four days of just like powwow, like goal setting and going through the plans and two-week sprints and things like that, that’s like, really helped. So, like, then, like the norm is work from home, the non-norm is like we get together and then we’re like, oh man, this is awesome. Like, we need to do this more often, actually like, you know, get together and plan and work. But I think we don’t need to be like on top of each other all the time either.

 

Speaker 1 | 30:22.892

Absolutely. Absolutely. Like, that’s, I do believe that there is value in getting together. I do believe there’s value in coming to the office, whatever the office is, you know, kind of thing. You know, seeing your coworkers, seeing other people in the, in the company as well. I think there’s, I think there’s value to that. I also think that sometimes you can get to a decision a lot quicker if you sit at a table together. It is very easy to go, well, you know, we’ve been on this Zoom call for an hour and we hadn’t got anything really decided. Let’s have another Zoom call next week. And then we just keep kicking this can down the road. And when we could have done an hour in a conference room and got this knocked out.

 

Speaker 0 | 31:00.280

Marker boards and marker boards and pizza. Yeah.

 

Speaker 1 | 31:04.083

You know, we can certainly do that. But, you know, like, like for me, this particular company is very lenient with their work from home policy. And so, and I work with some that aren’t. So, I mean, I have to say this particular company, but you know, I require my people to be in three days on one. Pick your three days. Actually, two of them are up to you, one of them is up to our CEO. Um, he does a he does a monthly update for everybody, and he likes everybody in the building. So you get today that I’m telling you when to be in the building two other days. Pick um, and then, yeah. Now on the whole, most of my people are in two to three days a week because I make them, but because they want to be. Yeah, you know, and so it’s, and what I have found, you know, I’m in my third year working here, what I have found here is that that they themselves start coordinating. like, oh, you know, you’re going to be in the office and we need to work on something. I’ll make sure I’m in the office that day. So, so, we can do that. And let’s figure out how to get lunch and, you know, things like that. So it becomes much more of a culture of of, hey, I want to be around my co-workers and, hey, we got problems to solve. And there’s value in, you know, sitting, you know, around a conference table and figuring this out, or sitting at our desks and figuring this out. You know, so it’s a really nice way to do that. And I think that that’s something that every single person that I interview for any job, they always ask about work. How much can I work from home? When can I work from home? How do I get to work?

 

Speaker 0 | 32:30.576

How far away can I work? So do you really care where I’m at as long? Because I have another guy that works for a very big company, Siemens. Amazing, brilliant, brilliant engineer. And he’s like, yeah, you know, I’m hoping they just don’t care that I’m not in Dubai anymore. I’m hoping they’re okay that I’m over here right now. But it’s just kind of an interesting topic. Does work from home work from anywhere? Or is it, no, you have to be geographically somewhere? I’m I’m sure there’s going to be some issues there. Anyways, pay him, give him benefits, work from home. Work from home. What else?

 

Speaker 1 | 33:11.425

Really, those are the big ones. You know, when you find somebody who can, you know, when you find a company that you can work for that meets those things, so that’s generally what people are wanting, at least what I’ve seen out of my interviewing, you generally find a happy employee. And then the next piece of it is. You know, it’s, it’s much more about the, the interviewer and the company itself, than it is about the person you’re trying to fill the seat up. I believe being honest and open about what I expect you to do in your job is huge. Because you find people that go, Oh, I don’t want to do that. Well, I mean, like in my case, I don’t want to code, you know, I mean, obviously we. We’ve reached the point in life that you probably wouldn’t want to let me near a machine to code anyway, but the, you know, it’s, it’s, it’s one of those things where the, you know, the people. I don’t want to sell somebody a bag of goods. That’s not true. I want you to take the job because this is what you want to do. And you want to do it for this company. And you want to do it working for me.

 

Speaker 0 | 34:09.911

What happens when things change?

 

Speaker 1 | 34:12.494

My senior vice president of sales loves to call that promoting them outwardly.

 

Speaker 0 | 34:17.315

I’m just saying, sometimes there’s a, I don’t know, a consolidation, or there’s a, uh, what? there’s a merger and acquisition, or there’s a something and. Look, you were hired for this, but we also need this. Or, I guess it’s kind of a two-part question. First of all, how do you find the right people? Be specific, I guess. It’s like, we need coders to do coding, and it’s really boring coding. I just want to let you know ahead of time, but you can work from home, and you get burritos every Tuesday. Right. And the code needs to be done well and fast, and somewhat bug-free. Okay. The I guess that, but OK, so setting the right expectations. But what happens when things change? Promote. When it happens, when we promote outwardly.

 

Speaker 1 | 35:06.243

You know, so when things change, you know, if it’s, if it’s new job responsibilities, you know, Whenever I’m sitting around, you know, a table. From an executive perspective, looking at that and going, hey, we need to, you know, we’ve got to add this particular skill set to the team or something like that. I generally try to start with who I think is capable to do it. And also generally, between their one-on-ones and reviews and things like that, I’ve heard, oh, I’d like more responsibilities. or, oh, I’m really interested in this thing that we don’t really have right now, but I’ve been studying this. If an opportunity ever comes along.

 

Speaker 0 | 35:40.896

AI, or something. Okay. Exactly. The reason why I’m thinking is because once you’ve done infrastructure as a service, we don’t need an infrastructure guy anymore. So what do we do with him?

 

Speaker 1 | 35:51.280

Right. You move them into other things that they either are passionate about or they want to learn. You know, or, and it absolutely happens, they need to go somewhere else. You know, I had a guy who worked for me several years ago, and his skills were amazing for what he did. And when the direction of the IT department changed, which was 100% my fault, let’s just call it what it was, I had to meet business needs and we had to kind of make a left-hand turn. His skill set did not transfer. And so. You know, we had the conversations of, Hey, we need to, you know, we need to get you some classes. Are you interested in doing this? Those kinds of things. And, and I was hearing, I’m very interested, but the actions were not meeting those words.

 

Speaker 0 | 36:40.958

Exactly. It’s like, it wasn’t a talent. It was like, I’ll do it. I want to, but I cannot do it.

 

Speaker 1 | 36:47.580

Yeah. Or, you know, Oh, I really just don’t want to learn that. Like, I have these skills and they’re valuable. And And, you know, it was a hard conversation to sit him down and go, I understand these skills are valuable. Let me help you find somewhere that your skills are valuable. Like, what you do is very, and honestly, I mean, like, genius at making servers sing and hum. And do all the things they needed to do. And doing it on a shoestring budget, all kinds of things. Like, I mean, genius at making things happen. But I just didn’t need that anymore. And so it was. But I know there’s 10 companies within a three mile radius that do. And so it’s like, let’s find you the right place. He quit in a huff right before Christmas one year, but that’s his own business.

 

Speaker 0 | 37:37.424

Do you think everyone should have some sort of an entrepreneurial mindset in today’s world?

 

Speaker 1 | 37:43.168

Some people, but I don’t think it’s required for all people. Everyone going down this hole, like, oh my gosh, everybody should be an entrepreneur. It’s like, well, that’s great, but… Some people don’t want to be that. Some people want to be told, I need you to do X, Y, and Z. I need it by so-and-so date. Please have this happen. And they will. And it will be on time and perfect and gorgeous, and wrapped with a bow and sitting on my desk.

 

Speaker 0 | 38:04.937

I have realized that so well that I just love taking orders some days. And there’s just some days I wish I could be like, why am I doing this crazy out? Just really a thousand moving parts. I just want to go back to taking orders. Okay. I’m really good at taking orders and executing and doing one or two tasks. really, really well. I’m super add, and that was driving me nuts.

 

Speaker 1 | 38:24.587

Yeah. Yeah. I mean, like, I’ve got, I’ve got a, I’ve got. A business analyst that used to be a huge director for a call center and 10, 15,000 employee kind of situation. And he is really good at project managing and at business analyst. That’s what he really developed a passion for over years, working at his previous company. And then whenever he applied to work. You know, in this, the position that I had, it was, you know, here’s my qualification, here’s my skills. And, you know, we went through that whole entire thing and he was the right person for the job. And the very first thing he tells me is I do not want to be a manager. I do not want to supervise. I do not want to be a director. Not what I want to do anymore in my life. And I went, great, because I don’t need you to do those things. You know, and he’s worked for me now for about two and a half years or so. And, and about 30 days ago, he goes, if you ever need somebody to supervise. Probably at a point where I could think about doing it, I might be able to mentally handle it. Yeah, and I’m like, great, I will keep that in mind, you know? And and then, like, you know, on the other hand, like, I’ve got a I’ve got a newly minted project manager that came on as an operations business analyst. Like he, he started, you know, doing business processes for me and documenting them and and getting them into shape and streamlining them and all that stuff. With, you know, Six, Sigma and Lean, and, you know, pick the next buzzword of the year. And, uh, and he went through all that and then goes, I’ve always wanted to be a project manager and I’m willing to go, do and put in the work. And I went, great, go get your PMP and we’ll have that conversation. And in November of last year, he walked into my office and goes, here’s my PMP. I went, fantastic. We’ll make it happen. Like, beautiful. Like, you know, I need this. You fill the need. We can move you into those kind of things.

 

Speaker 0 | 40:13.343

That’s my old nickname, fill the need. I’m serious. It is. It’s been outstanding. Yeah. I wish I could summarize. I wish I could summarize what the entity is, but I guess what it is is. There’s some people that are just, we’re all naturally good at certain things. And you said, you said, I’ve just been lucky, but it’s really not luck. What I’ve found is that it’s, it’s something that every, if you’re in the right position or you’re in the right place, if you’re doing what you’re doing. And you feel like, dude, this is just common sense. Like, I, I really am not special at whatever this is, But everyone else looks to it and they’re like, no, you don’t understand you are. Like, if it’s just like, I don’t know, it just seems like common sense and like, really easy to me. Trust me, it’s. It’s really not a big deal what I do. And um, that’s, you know, you know what I mean, like that, and you’re kind of like. So for me, sometimes it’s like people coming, they’re always coming to me asking about business ideas and I’m like, Ah, no, it’s garbage. No, definitely don’t do that. Nope, don’t do it. Nope, nope, nope. I’m just like the business. Like, shoot down guy like, No, are you sure you want to? Like, you want to open up a restaurant? No, let me tell you what a restaurant you’re going to be counting. Slices of pepperoni at the end of the night, slices of bacon. You’re going to have to count all this food. You’re going to have to do the schedule. You’re going to have to do this. You’re going to hate cooking. You’re doing it because you want to cook? No, you’re going to hate cooking. No, you’re going to hate life. Trust me. You’re going to have to do this. You’re going to have to do this. You’re going to have to work hours. You’re going to have leftover food. You’re going to have to throw it away. You’re going to have to donate this. There’s going to be shrinkage. Order the paper products, but wrong cups are going to come. You’re going to have to go somewhere else and get cups, and everyone’s mad because they’re in line waiting for the medium cups, and you only have small cups. Yeah, I used to work for Starbucks. books. I was like,

 

Speaker 1 | 41:54.552

I know this is going somewhere.

 

Speaker 0 | 41:58.953

Trust me. It’s, trust me. I don’t want to manage people anymore. Trust me. I don’t want to manage people. I don’t want to do this. I just want to stand behind the coffee machine, make coffee and talk with everyone that comes up. That you’re making their day happy. Because now they’ve got a bunch of caffeine in them and they want to go home. So I understand that guy. I really do. I really do. It’s been a pleasure having you on the show. Any, anything that any one thing like, really. Mind blowing thing that you’ve learned over the career, over your career, that you want to share with someone? Maybe it’s like a teaching moment or something like, I don’t know. I don’t know. What is it?

 

Speaker 1 | 42:31.069

Treat everybody like you treat yourself. I, you know, there is no one that is that. I get, okay, I guess, two pieces of advice, treat everybody decent. I treat the janitor the same way I treat the CEO. You know, it’s, it just is what it is. It takes you, it takes you really far in this.

 

Speaker 0 | 42:48.502

I might treat the janitor better, to be honest with you. And I was like, I’m like, head janitor. That’s what I signed paperwork on when they’re like, Hey, can you, you need to sign, authorizes some head janitor. Yep.

 

Speaker 1 | 42:59.085

No, it’s, you know, it, it, you know, you, you, you get a long way doing that. You get a lot of, um, I’ve found over the years, you get a lot of respect doing it. Because it’s, it’s not, I’m not better than anybody else. I have a position that is what it is, but I, I’m not better than anybody. Uh, and then the other thing that I think is, is, is a really big, It was a huge turning point for me early in my career. And a CEO said it to me. He goes, Kevin, I get up and do the same thing that you do every morning. I put my pants on the exact same way. And I mean, there’s a hundred thousand jokes. I’m like, well, then, I mean, obviously you just get out of bed and jump into a pair of pants.

 

Speaker 0 | 43:30.874

I just get out of bed because my pants are still on from the night before.

 

Speaker 1 | 43:35.495

You know, so it, but, but I mean, that was one of those things that, like, it was eyeopening to me. It was like, well, you know, yes, you know, they are the CEO of a company and they signed my paycheck. They could fire me at any second. But they’re human. They’re the same person, too. Like, they’ve been in the game longer. They have a different position. That was their path in life. So, I mean, I really would say those two things like, I, you know, I’m not particularly scared of, you know, a board of directors, or a CEO, or, you know, some vice president. Because, you know, I mean, especially when you’re on, like, the help desk, or you’re an engineer or something like that, they’ll have to go, oh, oh, well, the CEO wants this done right now. Well, that’s great. And if the CEO can do it right now, he can come over here and do that. I’m going to guess he can. Because he’s the CEO of this company.

 

Speaker 0 | 44:17.704

So you’re not, no, I hold the passwords.

 

Speaker 1 | 44:21.065

Like, you know, I mean, but then that whole, you know, then there’s the other side of that coin, you know, being that cocky, arrogant it guy doesn’t get you very far. It gets you on the street. But, you know, so, I mean, those are the two things that have been eye-opening for me and really helped me in my career. I would definitely say, treat everybody really well. And everybody puts their pants on the same way.

 

Speaker 0 | 44:44.018

Uh, that, that one’s actually really, really important because, um, a lot of people get scared of, like, the hierarchy or something like that. They get stressed out, they have anxiety. And in reality, you’ve got to be able to go connect and connect, discover, respond with people. And you have to understand that the, whatever the C level executives, the executives are probably, um, under a crap ton of stress. And they would really love somebody. They would really love somebody to ask them. Um, when it comes to the I.T department, what’s your single biggest frustration, problem or concern? or what’s your anxiety? What’s really keeping you up at night? What? What can we help you with? That’s really what that person wants, because they have a way more responsibility and load sitting on them than you could possibly imagine. Because they’ve got all these people that they’re responsible for, they’re responsible for all their lives, they’re responsible for their families. Um, and it’s actually quite a, quite a heavy load for a lot of people that have ever been in a leadership position. If you are responsible for other people’s lives, if you fail, you’ve failed all these other people. So, um, that’s why a lot of people just say, no, I just look, I just. I want a job. And I want to clock in and clock out and talk with you guys and have fun and connect. I don’t want that, it’s too much for some people. Yep, absolutely, absolutely, yeah, you know, I mean, honestly, like, I have found that. A lot of CEOs, you know, especially earlier

 

Speaker 1 | 46:00.967

in my IT career, like it was, you know you, you had CEOs that would, or, you know, just higher level people, higher level on the ORG chart, vice presidents and whatever. Um, go, oh, you know, I just, I just, I didn’t just go make this happen, that’s your job to figure it out. And and we absolutely all of us listening to this can shake their head and go, Yeah, I knew that. And we all, we all do. And uh. But realistically, if you take a step back from that, it’s. They don’t necessarily know how to solve it, they don’t want to solve it. And and like what you said, they have much, much, much bigger issues to worry about. Um, and and they need, you know, in this case, the IT guy, to go just solve this problem and come back when there, when there is a solution, um, you know, and, and I’ve made a career out of doing that. So I’m happy with that.

 

Speaker 0 | 46:46.056

Yeah. I mean, the Lord above help them. Yeah. Cause that’s usually where that type of thing comes from is high level anxiety and stuff. And yeah. Yeah. Well, there really are some, there really are some jerks out there.

 

Speaker 1 | 46:57.423

Oh, of course there are. I mean, that you’re going to run up against those all the time. and, you know, and And, you know, I mean, I’ve worked for him. I do say frequently, I’ve learned more from bad bosses than I have good bosses. And generally, that’s just how not to be them, to be honest.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:12.956

I learned nothing from that good boss. What’s his name again?

 

Speaker 1 | 47:18.120

Years and years and years. I mean, we’re talking going on 20 years now. I had a boss. He worked in Virginia and I was in North Carolina. He flew in on my first day and he goes, I just. The first words out of my mouth I need to tell you is I cannot do your job. I do not know how to do your, that’s why I hired you.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:35.293

I don’t know if it’s a good thing or a bad thing. It’s kind of cool. Actually.

 

Speaker 1 | 47:38.175

It was great. Like, we,

 

Speaker 0 | 47:39.656

that’s awesome.

 

Speaker 1 | 47:40.576

We were going to have our interactions. Like it was, I need you to be the expert that I hired you to be. And then he, you know, he took me to lunch, and then he flew back to Virginia.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:49.181

That’s pretty sweet.

 

Speaker 1 | 47:50.022

So I’m once a year on my review, he was a happy person, you know, you know, it was great. It was great.

 

Speaker 0 | 47:58.326

This probably to the second part of the AI part of the show, which is How do we use? um, how do we use? My happy place is clawed. When it comes to writing stuff for for my for, like any type of, uh, I don’t know, writing stuff. And I was trying to find, um, I was like, can you, can you come up with, uh, like, 10 ideas for for for memes for like it? Leadership? And I can’t remember what it was, and and AI, and hype and Gartner and all the can you mix it all together? And I can’t remember what the long prompt was, and it came up with, um, I’d say, Oh, I know it’s it. Leadership’s, uh, like speaking to the to the board and convincing with, convincing executive management to invest in the budget. But you can’t be technical. And you know, it was like it was like you must use at least one sports metaphor per every like, like complicated it, like, you know, explanation, like. It was like. We need to upgrade the ERP to do this to the API. For the whatever is it, you must put that into a sports metaphor, right? Cannot do your job and you do not know how to do your job. But we can talk a lot about the Dallas Cowboys. Kevin, been a pleasure. pleasure having you on the show. We want you back. We want you to give us updates on, I don’t know, any of these new things that have come about. And maybe it’s the AI future or something. Anything for us before we go?

 

Speaker 1 | 49:25.656

No, I really appreciate it. Thank you so much for the opportunity and would love to be back whenever you want to hear from me again.

 

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