I can’t count the number of times I installed Exchange 2003 or MetaFrame XP 
before doing it live.  I know I filled a yellow notepad full of notes on the 
precise order of steps to be taken and what updates broke stuff.  I also spent 
1 month in my lab and 3 months at the customer site labbing my first 5 AD 
Forest and 4 Exchange Org migration.  I am sure MBS pulled out a lot of his 
hair answering my thousands of questions.  Eight things in my “10 Things in 
AD…” presentation I hit in that migration (on the 1st migration which is why 
the next 4 went much smoother).


Carl Webster
Consultant and Citrix Technology Professional
http://www.CarlWebster.com<http://www.carlwebster.com/>

From: Michael B. Smith [mailto:[email protected]]
Subject: RE: Consulting (was Re: in-depth AD)

“a time or two”?

I figured I installed Exchange 2010 in a lab at least 25 times before I ever 
did it in the “real world”.

From: Webster 
[mailto:[email protected]]<mailto:[mailto:[email protected]]>
Subject: RE: Consulting (was Re: in-depth AD)

“It helps to have shot yourself in the foot a time or two, hopefully in a test 
environment. On resumes it reads “Experience”.”

It also helps get material for presentations! ☺


Carl Webster
Consultant and Citrix Technology Professional
http://www.CarlWebster.com<http://www.carlwebster.com/>

From: David Lum [mailto:[email protected]]<mailto:[mailto:[email protected]]>
Subject: RE: Consulting (was Re: in-depth AD)

“If you want to do platform transformation, then you need to know a bit about 
everything – there’s no way to get away from that.”

It helps to have shot yourself in the foot a time or two, hopefully in a test 
environment. On resumes it reads “Experience”. ☺

From: Ken Schaefer 
[mailto:[email protected]]<mailto:[mailto:[email protected]]>
Subject: RE: Consulting (was Re: in-depth AD)

I think you need to consider what you want to do.

If you want to be an engineer/delivery, then you can’t be a “jack of all 
trades” unless you want to do SOHO/SMB consulting. In that space, there is 
limited complexity, and google is your friend. You want to do medium/enterprise 
size stuff, then you need to have some kind of speciality. Knowing a bit about 
everything else is also helpful.

If you want to be an architect or strategist, then breadth is very important: 
technology is just one domain – and even within that domain, knowing a bit 
about information/data, networks, infrastructure, software etc. can be 
immensely helpful.

If you want to do platform transformation, then you need to know a bit about 
everything – there’s no way to get away from that.

Cheers
Ken

From: Don Kuhlman 
[mailto:[email protected]]<mailto:[mailto:[email protected]]>
Subject: OT: Consulting (was Re: in-depth AD)

Hi folks.  First off, thanks to all of you - I truly appreciate your thoughts!

This all really helps and I think I see a pattern emerging.

I need to stop trying to become some kind of an "expert" at everything and pick 
something I know and am very confident in doing.  After that, spend quality 
time learning and honing those skills, then get involved in those communities, 
blog, network and get known, and then see how that works.

I tend to spend too much time reading and looking over bits of everything 
related to IT - virtualization, storage, backup, ad, windows, security, 
networks, monitoring, vpn, citrix, this year it's been Linux and MAC.  It makes 
for a good vocabulary, but not the best use of our finite amounts of time.  I 
want re-focus and use that limited time getting really good at one or two 
things.

Hopefully, once I do that, those referrals and work will start coming in and I 
can be like you all :)

~ Finally, powerful endpoint security that ISN'T a resource hog! ~
~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

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