For three and a half years, the 'Confessions of an IT Manager', by Phil Factor, have been a distinctive part of Simple-Talk's output. Now compiled into a 300 page book, they form a unique commentary of the comic, and someties bizarre, nature of a career in IT. As Phil himself descibes it 'a textbook on how to survive in IT, and how to thoroughly enjoy the experience'
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As I write these words, I look with amazement at a very smart-looking 305-page book; the 2nd Edition of The Confessions of an IT Manager, the complete collection of ‘Opinion-pieces’, both articles and blogs, first written for Simple-Talk and Business of Software over a period of three and a half years.
Whenever anyone accuses me of not being a real person, it takes me by surprise. What else could I be: A committee like Shakespeare? The ubiquitous Al in ‘et al’ of scientific papers? No. I just have to use a nom de plume for my writings, but I still feel as real as anyone else who has used a different name for their literary output. After all, Mark Twain or Lewis Carroll both felt that when they banged their finger with a hammer, it hurt. They didn’t consider themselves at all fictional. I have to use a nom de plume for two reasons: Firstly, the publication of amusing reminiscences of life in the workplace is usually seen as a negative point on a CV, especially if one is taking a rather satirical view of one’s colleagues’ morals and abilities. Secondly, I would hate anyone to mistakenly identify themselves or a colleague in one of the characters from my stories. I aim to make general points about the bizarre working lives of IT people, not to make hurtful remarks about individuals, or to attack people who can’t fight back.. The Individual characters are all entirely fictional participants in the stories.
Having made that clear, I have to make a small confession. Phil Factor is, in a subtle way, a different person from me, his creator. In a sense, he soon took on a life of his own that is quite distinct from mine. He escaped from me: Phil’s reminiscences are autobiographical, because I find it very difficult to write fiction, but they are stocked with fictional characters and disguised locations. Phil’s independent streak is so strong that he soon struck out on his own and became his own man. We all now speak of him as if he has taken on a separate existence. Like me, Phil is a comical figure in that he, like most people who are working in IT, cannot really understand what is going on around him. We work in an insubstantial universe of shifting realities, where certainties turn out to be illusion. Phil shares quite a lot with Conan Doyle’s hilarious creation ‘Brigadier Gerard’ whose autobiographical adventures are based on his quite false premise that he is a great and admired figure rather than a buffoon who causes chaos wherever he goes. Conan Doyle’s brilliant twist to the stories is that one ends up realizing Brigadier Gerard’s essential nobility. I hope that Phil shows the same virtues. He is a cynic and a survivor, but he is strongly guided by his conscience..
Although Phil is recognizably British, the single most important inspiration for this long series of articles is not a British book, but Mell Lazarus’ brilliant American novel ‘The Boss is Crazy Too’. This was based loosely on his experiences, early in his career, as an apprentice cartoonist working for Al Capp and his brother Elliott Caplin at their Toby Press, which published a range of comics such as Shmoo. He is now famous as the creator of the ‘Miss Peach’ and ‘Momma’ comic strips. For some reason, his experiences resonate with my own experiences of work in IT. There is a lot in common with all office work, and it transcends national boundaries and language. My other inspirations amongst American authors are are Philip K Dick, Don Marquis and Dorothy Parker , but also a brace of British comic writers such as Stella Gibbons, Auberon Waugh, Evelyn Waugh, P G Wodehouse, A A Milne, G K Chesterton and A P Herbert. Stylistically, my greatest influence is an Italian writer who didn’t even write in English: Giovanni Guareschi. .
Why should you read the book? It is because it is written for anyone who struggles to find the comic aspects of working in IT. You will find that almost every story and article in the book has a subtext, a hidden message: they are constructed like fables. The stories start with a theme, such as the way that we misunderstand our real role within an organization, and then I bring my own experiences to illustrate that theme. I see the book more as a textbook on how to survive in IT, and how to thoroughly enjoy the experience. If you have already achieved that goal, then you do not need the book, but you will still find it amusing to read, I hope. If you haven’t, then read it carefully, for Phil, though absurd, opinionated and gullible, is a cunning and tough character who disguises the medicine of sage advice, gleaned from others over the years, in a sugar coated pill of humour..
The Contents
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Contents
3
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Introduction
7
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Foreword
9
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The DBA's Demise - a recitation
10
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Section I: On Learning to Love your Manager
12
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Training Your IT Manager
13
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The Septic Tank
19
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The Yancey Men
23
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Bunnikins!
29
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Betting on Promotion
35
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How to Prevent Initiatives
39
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Irregular verbs for IT managers
45
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Phrases with which to discourage ideas
47
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Initiating a project with a Strategy one-pager
51
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Looking Busy
55
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Doing things - The Manual
59
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The Incident of 'The Two Johns' – an IT Manager confesses
61
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Section II: The Strange Business of Software
64
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Going It Alone
65
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The Walrus and the Manager
69
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Click-A-Crematorium
75
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A Chilling Prophecy
79
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Talking Technical
81
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The Diary of a Microsoft Marketing Man
85
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Microsoft Boy announces his School Homework
87
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The March of Technology
91
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Clinging to the Flotsam. A Survivor's Tale
97
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Section III: Software Projects: the Good, the Bad and the Pitiful
100
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Secrets of successful IT projects
101
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Confessions of an IT Strategist
109
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The Technically Minded Subclass and the Fog of Misperception
113
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The Data Dialog
117
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The Joy of NAD
121
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Smoke and Mirrors
127
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The Acronym Playpen
131
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The Writing on the Wall
135
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The Ghost in the Machine
139
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The Sticking Page-Down-Key Incident
145
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The Escape from Developer Hell
149
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The Time Bomb
153
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On the Trail with the Cowboy Coders
159
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When the Fever is Over, and one's Work is done
163
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Section IV: Hiring, Firing and other acts of Villainy
174
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Bogus resumes and unblushing lies: navigating the database hiring waters
175
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IT Agencies and the Devil
181
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The Stepford Geeks
187
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The Terror of Technical Tests
191
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The Interview with the Psychometric Test
193
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Brown Shoes Don't Make It
195
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Technical Interviews and Tests Have Got to Stop!
199
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Two stops short of Dagenham
203
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The March of Time
207
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Fired With Enthusiasm
209
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The Whipping Boy
213
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Hens that Crow
219
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The New Man
223
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Section V: What If …?
228
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Had IT been responsible for the Creation
229
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Had offshoring been responsible for Hamlet
233
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Had Tennyson been a Technical Author
239
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Had God been a Technical Author
241
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Had the Sistine Chapel been Created by Committee
243
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Captain Codd and the Simple Proposition
249
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Section VI: Hiccoughs in the Working Day
254
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I could do it in my Sleep
255
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The Pub Lunch and Programming
259
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At half-past three, it's time for tea
261
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Cha: Tea-drinking for IT Developers
265
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Survival Tips for PowerPoint Boredom
269
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The Joy of IT Meetings
275
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Why do we call them 'Bugs'?
279
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The Ballad of the Tuple Relation
281
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Common Law, and the Need for Restraint
283
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Phil Factor on the Law
287
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Santa's SLA
291
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Tomorrow will be our Dancing Day
295
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The Data Center that Exploded: A Halloween Tale
301
The Ebook of the second edition of Phil factor's 'Confessions of an IT Manager' is available from here and the printed version is available to buy from Amazon.