跟读练习: How I Escaped Help Desk Fast (Step-by-Step) - 通过YouTube学习英语口语
B2
Ladies and gentlemen, in this video,
257 句
如果句子过短或过长,请点击 Edit 进行调整。
1
Ladies and gentlemen, in this video,
2
I'm going to discuss how I escaped help desk fast.
3
Now, first, I need to start with the fact that help desk is not a career.
4
I know that some people are going to get angry about that.
5
Not that it can't be a career,
6
but in my opinion, it's meant to be like an entryway.
7
It's meant to be a launch pad.
8
And if you treat it like anything else,
9
which I've seen a lot of people do, you will get stuck.
10
I was in help desk for a small four months before I escaped and became a system administrator.
11
In this video, I'm going to explain to you how I did it exactly step by step
12
so that you can do the same thing.
13
Okay, so first, before I was in IT,
14
I was a teacher in Texas.
15
I taught Spanish and I was also a coach and I was making about $70,000,
16
which in teacher standards is pretty good.
17
But I just kind of got fed up.
18
I had huge classes.
19
I had like a lack of purpose.
20
I didn't really have a real growth trajectory.
21
I loved tech.
22
I loved computers.
23
And I looked at IT and I thought this is where the future is.
24
And this is where I want to be so I can find purpose,
25
grow my career, make more money,
26
make more responsibility, or rather have more responsibility.
27
And just this is where I need to be.
28
And so my last year as a teacher,
29
I spent eight months, took all of my like 20 days off that I had and I studied for three certs,
30
the A+, the Network+, and the Security+, all by CompTIA.
31
And by the time my teaching contract was up,
32
I had already lined up an IT job,
33
an entry-level job at an MSP.
34
And I applied for jobs for a total of about two months.
35
I think I had 32 tailored applications
36
and that's relatively low in the space in terms of what I've seen other people have to do.
37
Now, again, my first role was at an MSP,
38
which is a managed service provider.
39
So we gave IT services to other companies,
40
specifically banks and credit unions.
41
And it was a tier one position.
42
It was technically called tier one special services engineer,
43
which sounds cool, but I wasn't really engineering anything.
44
I was like pinging down devices.
45
I was doing a lot of phishing email analysis,
46
which was actually pretty fun.
47
VPN, end user DNS stuff, troubleshooting hardware, software.
48
It was normal tier one stuff.
49
I was fortunate that I got to work remote basically from day one.
50
But to be honest, I really hated being in the call queue.
51
I was taking back-to-back calls and I just hated it.
52
I wanted to get out of the call queue as quickly as I possibly could.
53
And please note, I made a ton of mistakes at tier one as well.
54
Like early on, I thought that I had to be this person
55
that knew everything and I would almost act like I knew everything,
56
but I really didn't.
57
And I was making tons of mistakes.
58
I wasn't asking the right questions because I didn't know what to ask,
59
but I picked up quickly that it's best to just accept that you don't know information,
60
ask as many questions as you can about it,
61
be honest about that to the end user and then go do your research and come back to them.
62
This is one of my first big lessons.
63
Now, why I think most people get stuck,
64
and this is what I saw in a lot of my coworkers,
65
is that a lot of them just stopped they just got the position
66
and they stopped learning they stopped studying they stopped trying really hard they stopped getting certs
67
and honestly i think a lot of it was fear they
68
were scared of moving up they were scared of failing they were scared of not being ready
69
and people just have this tendency to just kind of sit back
70
and like take their foot off the gas and just get comfortable
71
and comfortable just turns into getting stuck
72
and to be honest with you i went into tier one with a a completely different mentality.
73
I knew that I wanted to get out as soon as humanly possible.
74
I was making like $48,000.
75
I had bills to pay.
76
I had goals that I had to reach.
77
Again, my plan was just to move up as quickly as possible.
78
I wanted to at least match my teacher's salary of $70,000.
79
And here's exactly what I did.
80
First, I outworked everyone.
81
I took more tickets than anyone else on tier one.
82
I closed more tickets than anyone else on tier one.
83
I also billed more hours than anyone else on tier one.
84
This is not me bragging.
85
This is just me telling you what it takes to make your move out of tier one to be inevitable.
86
When you're new and you don't have like years of experience that you can bank on,
87
the only thing that you can actually control is your effort.
88
And so you have to max this out.
89
I wanted my name to be at the top of every single report,
90
leaderboard, metric, anything that my bosses or my boss's bosses were seeing.
91
And to be honest with you,
92
it worked and people noticed.
93
Like people called it out in meetings.
94
And I remember the tier three manager calling it out to me and I felt all giddy and good inside.
95
Next, I got my CCNA in four months.
96
While I was grinding tickets during the day,
97
I was studying at night.
98
It was like an hour a day.
99
Sometimes it was two hours.
100
Sometimes it was three if you would count flashcards.
101
My wife and I would go shopping.
102
I recall one time being in HomeGoods and just studying Anki cards the entire time.
103
I already had a small home lab set up and I also had Cisco Packet Tracer.
104
So I was doing a lot of practicing with labs.
105
Nobody else on tier one that I knew of even had their CCNA.
106
Now this made me stand out above everyone else.
107
And if there's one cert that moves the needle at that early stage,
108
I really think that it's CCNA.
109
This was a big separator.
110
Next, I helped everyone that I possibly could.
111
I offered to mentor the new incoming tier ones.
112
This was when I had like one or two months of experience.
113
I offered to help the tier twos.
114
I begged to help the tier three system engineers.
115
Now, over time, I became known as the guy that helps everyone.
116
And I think that that reputation is powerful.
117
When a promotion comes up and leadership is kind of deciding between like five people,
118
I feel like they're going to choose the guy who helps everyone.
119
That's the person that's going to get the shot.
120
Now on top of this,
121
and this is huge, I also volunteered for the hard stuff.
122
When there was a problem that nobody touched,
123
I always raised my hand.
124
Was I qualified?
125
Absolutely not.
126
Was I scared?
127
Usually, but I always just dove in and did it.
128
And to be honest, I think that mindset really helped me a lot as well.
129
Like you're never going to be ready.
130
You're never going to feel like you're ready.
131
And this goes for anything in life.
132
Like if you wait until you feel ready for that next thing,
133
you're never actually going to feel ready and you're never actually going to move forward.
134
The key is to just expand your domain as much as humanly possible
135
and then catch up and then keep that process going,
136
expand and catch up.
137
So you take the hard ticket,
138
you learn it on the fly and you figure it out and you become better on the other side.
139
Now, four months in a system administrator,
140
a tier two system administrator position opened up internally.
141
And I applied and I walked into that interview extremely confident,
142
even though I knew at the time I was not ready for the job.
143
Again, technically I was not even close to ready,
144
but to be honest, again, you never are.
145
I was confident I had put in the work.
146
I took the CCNA.
147
I could learn anything.
148
I had the reputation that I help anyone and I was ready to just walk into the fire.
149
I got the promotion and in week one of being a tier two,
150
they threw me into a priority one ticket that had been ongoing for like two months.
151
A customer had been frustrated over a networking issue that had never been resolved.
152
I took it, I was terrified.
153
Like I legitimately didn't sleep good for like the couple of weeks that I was suffering on that ticket.
154
But again, I just attacked it head on.
155
I went into these meetings.
156
I'm talking with multiple CCNP network engineers and CEO of bank and I was completely in over my head,
157
but I just took everything on head on and I was as confident as I could possibly be.
158
And I never looked back.
159
Now my system administrator position had a base salary of I think it was $55,000
160
and then it had some variable stuff on top of it.
161
So you'd get paid more if you billed more
162
and you could bill more by doing things like taking priority one tickets or like working after hour tickets.
163
And there was a rounding system in there too.
164
So if you did like five minutes of work,
165
it would round up to a quarter of an hour.
166
So you could kind of cheese the system a little bit.
167
Realistically, if you worked super hard and took a bunch of P1s,
168
you could probably make up to like $100,000.
169
I think in my only actual year as a system administrator, I made $87,000.
170
So I went from 48K in year one to like just about 90K in year two.
171
So I was pretty happy.
172
And this is like what's possible when you refuse to just be comfortable.
173
Now, was I comfortable with that salary?
174
I mean, when I got to that salary and I worked one year,
175
honestly, I was ready to make more.
176
I was ready to make 100K.
177
I was ready to move on to the next position.
178
And I always feel that.
179
Like I always want more money, more responsibility, more purpose.
180
And I want to make a big difference and build cool things.
181
Now, if I had to boil it all down into three things,
182
it would be the following.
183
One, I just worked harder than everyone else.
184
I just outworked everyone else.
185
I took more tickets.
186
I did build more hours.
187
I just worked harder.
188
That's the foundation.
189
Secondly, I was fearless in the job and in the interview.
190
I said yes to everything.
191
Even when I was scared,
192
I said yes to things.
193
Even when I was uncomfortable, I said yes.
194
And I put myself into some positions that really sucked,
195
to be honest, that were, you know, really scary.
196
But I just think that's how you learn and that's how you become better on the other side.
197
And that mentality really helped me a lot to grow.
198
And fear is that thing that keeps people stuck in help desk for like two,
199
three years until they feel ready.
200
But again, you never feel ready.
201
Just don't let that happen to you.
202
And then three, I got my certs.
203
I had A+, network plus, security plus.
204
I got CCNA when I went up to,
205
you know, system administrator, I still continued getting certs.
206
I started getting cloud certs like AZ-104 and SC-300,
207
and I just never stopped the grind of studying either.
208
So if you're stuck in help desk and you're wondering why you can't move up and you're not getting new certs,
209
like at least three per year,
210
then you need to take a look at that area of your life as well and just continue getting certs.
211
Now, I know a lot of people don't like to hear this,
212
but you don't need to stay in help desk for years before you can move up.
213
I'm living proof that that is the case.
214
Was it easy? no. Did it take lots of time and effort?
215
Absolutely.
216
Was it worth it?
217
Yes, absolutely.
218
Being a system administrator is legitimately a better job.
219
Like, of course you get paid more money,
220
but it's way more enjoyable as well.
221
The help desk is an amazing learning opportunity,
222
and we shouldn't forget that either.
223
Like four to six months at help desk can teach you
224
so much about tech if you grind and you work really hard.
225
But there's also diminishing marginal returns,
226
and you get to a point where you're like,
227
man, I'm ready for something more.
228
Now I was a system administrator for almost a year and a half.
229
And as I said, a teacher in the past,
230
I made a YouTube channel about tech videos,
231
and I ended up getting a job out in San Francisco with a startup called InPhysical,
232
where I do developer relations.
233
I work with AI a lot.
234
I work with some of the most cracked engineers in the industry doing secrets management,
235
certificate management, privileged access management,
236
and I genuinely love what I do.
237
I can tell you when I got this job,
238
I went into the interviews confident,
239
and it was the same story.
240
I was super in over my head.
241
I was nowhere near where I needed to be technically.
242
I'm still not.
243
And I'm always trying to learn and trying to grow and trying to get better.
244
I think that that's one of the reasons why I got this new job as well.
245
And I think that if you take these patterns and you just apply them to legitimately every area of your life,
246
you will be successful in whatever you wanna do.
247
None of this happens if I get comfortable in tier one.
248
So this is what I want for you guys.
249
I want you to go out and apply these lessons and I guess these patterns and see what happens for your life.
250
If you do it for one year,
251
I promise you will see a marked increase in your ability to do things,
252
in your confidence, and you're probably going to get a better job.
253
I appreciate you guys for all the support.
254
Be safe, be smart, make some good decisions,
255
and good luck leveling up in your life,
256
grinding through the fire, and getting out of help desk.
257
Bye.
下载应用
AI 为你说出的每个句子打分
TRENDING
热门
本课概述
在本课中,学习者将通过分析一位从帮助台职位顺利转型为系统管理员的经历,来提高他们的英语听说能力。通过模仿这段经历中的关键对话和短语,学习者能够增强他们的英语发音,并在英语影子跟读(shadowspeak)练习中获得更高的流利度。这段内容不仅帮助您了解IT行业的基本工作流程,还能在雅思口语练习中提升您的自信心。
关键词汇与短语
- 帮助台 (Help Desk) - IT功能的第一接触点,为用户提供技术支持。
- 入门级工作 (Entry-Level Job) - 适合刚入行的员工的工作职位。
- 安全证书 (Security+) - 一种认证,证明持有人在信息安全方面的能力。
- 远程工作 (Remote Work) - 不在办公室工作,而是在其他地方工作的方式。
- 故障排除 (Troubleshooting) - 解决技术问题的过程。
- 职业发展 (Career Growth) - 在职场上前进和提升的过程。
- 技术支持 (Technical Support) - 为用户提供技术问题解决方案的服务。
- IT服务管理 (IT Service Management) - 管理和提供IT服务的实践。
练习技巧
在进行本课的影子跟读(shadowspeak)练习时,建议您先完整观看视频,提高对内容的理解。接下来,尝试跟随视频中发言者的语速和语调进行发音练习。可以尝试慢速回放关键部分,直到您能自信地复述。在复述时,注意语音的节奏、重音以及停顿,这将有助于改善您的发音,进而在雅思口语练习中取得更好的成绩。
此外,您可以在跟读时提升体验,通过重复的练习巩固记忆,逐步使自己适应更快的说话速度。坚持每天进行短时间的影子跟读(shadowspeaks)练习,将大幅提高您的英语口语能力。
什么是跟读法?
跟读法 (Shadowing) 是一种有科学依据的语言学习技巧,最初开发用于专业口译员的培训,并由多语言者Alexander Arguelles博士普及。这个方法简单而强大:您在听英语母语原声的同时立即大声重复——就像是一个延迟1-2秒紧跟说话者的影子。与被动听力或语法练习不同,跟读法强迫您的大脑和口腔肌肉同时处理并模仿真实的讲话模式。研究表明它能显着提高发音准确性,语调,节奏,连读,听力理解和口语流利度——使其成为雅思口语备考和真实英语交流最有效的方法之一。
