In-Depth
LAMTEC: Sole IT Guy
Like your job? Here's your chance to compare your company with eight of the best—at least in how they treat their Microsoft Certified Professionals.
- By Dian Schaffhauser
- September 01, 2000
Along with his holiday bonus check and some profit-sharing
monies, MCSE John Schramm appreciated the gift he received
from his company last year: a Sony DVD. Plus, he enjoys
the privilege of taking home networking equipment as needed
for practice purposes. Of course, it’s not all paradise
working for Flanders, New Jersey-based manufacturer LAMTEC.
For one thing, Schramm is the sole IT guy. For another,
“What we do is not pretty, but is very functional.” Schramm
is just wrapping up his first year as MIS Manager with
the company, which makes vapor retarder materials for
insulation. He provides services for about 30 users, several
of whom are off-site.
This
Year’s Best Companies! |
LAMTEC
Corp. Manufacturer of vapor
retarder materials for insulation;
about 30 employees
Nominated:
Flanders, New Jersey
www.lamtec.com
800-852-6832, 973-584-5500 |
|
|
In his first week of work, Schramm recalls, he “got rid
of NetBEUI and dropped static IP addresses, set up a DHCP
server, started in-house DNS, and upgraded the modems
on the dial-up RAS server.”
A key to his success on the job, Schramm says, is that
his boss understands technology. In fact, Schramm considers
Paul Bocchino an IT equal in every way, even though he
carries the title of CFO. “This makes it easy to get purchases
through,” Schramm explains. When he wanted to upgrade
a server, the only question Bocchino had for him was how
much RAM he needed. It’s a far cry from “the four pounds
of paperwork and two to three weeks’ lead time I was used
to where I worked before.”
Schramm says that so far in his short stint, he’s rebuilt
all of the company’s servers, redesigned its network,
and redone two of its affiliate companies’ networks. He’s
also installed a T-1 line, moved the company’s Web site
to an in-house server, and rewired a Cleveland, Ohio-based
company owned by LAMTEC’s management.
Now Schramm, Bocchino, and another MIS person are getting
ready to build a network at the school attended by the
daughter of LAMTEC’s president. Among its components:
150 workstations, at least four servers, a firewall, a
fiber connection to the administration building, a T-1
line, and a fractional T-1 line for Internet access. “Plus,”
says Schramm, “we’re supposed to be setting up a Web server
and securing parental access to grades.” He calls all
of this a good “part-time project.”
Bocchino says a crucial part of keeping IT people happy
is for management to understand the kind of working environment
they need. IT workers have to be challenged, he says,
and “they need to have access to things. You can’t say
to them, ‘I want you to put in an ideal network, but you
have to use the old machine.’”
His conclusion: “A lot of people who run IS areas don’t
understand what’s going on... You need a manager who will
show off the accomplishments of your staff.”
For his part, Schramm highly recommends working for a
small company if it’s run by “smart people.” The only
downside for others seeking a similar opportunity at LAMTEC:
“They aren’t hiring! Sorry!”
About the Author
Dian L. Schaffhauser is a freelance writer based in Northern California.