You're suddenly getting more membership applications from
AARP than those pesky credit card companies. This can mean only one thing:
Your days as a network professional are numbered.
Which isn't to say your work is done. On the contrary, you've
got a few good years left - maybe more than a few - and looming retirement
can be a catalyst for accomplishments great and small.
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It's in this spirit that we offer our suggestions for 10
things to do before you retire.
1. Shouts of "You
da man!" stopped being funny on the golf course long ago. However,
being "da man" or "da woman" remains a burning preretirement ambition
for network professionals, including many respondents to Network
World's annual online You
survey. CIO seems to be the title of choice, according to our
informal survey. But a few are aiming even higher: CEO or, for
those with an entrepreneurial bent, founder.
Careful what you wish for, lest retirement come sooner than
you anticipated.
2. How about a U-turn at the corner office? No
survey participant owned up to harboring the notion, but here's
betting at least one net executive out there would just love to
spend his or her final work years away from the boardroom politics
and back on the front lines.
Why not? ... It's only money.
3. Pro athletes are always talking about "giving back"
to the fans. A few are even sincere about the idea.
You're a pro, too, and while you don't make millions,
you'd still like to give something back to your community before that gold
watch arrives.
So pick a favorite charity, school or political organization.
Chances are, it would welcome your network expertise almost as much as a fat
check. If you can bring your company's clout to bear, so much the better.
4. Here's a sanitized version of an old oil-country
bumper sticker: "Please Lord, just give us one more boom and I
promise not to toss this one away."
What network executive isn't hoping against hope to see
one more boom - or at least a boomlet - where budget allocations, salary increases
and stock options flow like springtime snowmelt in the Rockies.
Just ... one ... more.
This time you'll make hay while the sun is shining, and
avoid all those greedy, foolish mistakes that have folks hip-deep in hot water
today ... Right?
5. Not many of you submitted what you might call "fantasy
entries" in our You survey. But who hasn't at least once dreamed
of telling the big boss with the grand plan that he wouldn't recognize
reality if it nipped him on the kneecap.
"Listen," you hear yourself telling him, "I could stand
here and prattle on about how we'll have that project wrapped in under the
six months you've decreed and for less than the $1 million you've given
us. You'll believe me, too, 'cuz my kid knows more about this stuff than
you do.
"But, I'm not going to do that song and dance. I'm going
to tell you the truth - both because my mom didn't raise no liars, and somebody's
got to keep this company out of the toilet."
Might want to make sure you're fully vested before trying
this speech.
6.
The survey did produce at least one fantasy aspiration.
"Just once," this dreamer writes, "I'd like to have
a project implemented on its technical merits, rather than slaughtered by
the accountants."
That's not asking for too much.
7. Forget the cliché: You can indeed teach an
old, network dog new tricks, according to our readers, even with
retirement clearly on the horizon. Doesn't matter where you stand
on the corporate ladder, either. A number of network executives
even talk about a desire to earn specific certifications, such
as their CCIE stripes. "Learn as much as possible," suggests one.
"Money and titles don't really matter."
Hey, let's not get carried away.
8. Leave a legacy that goes beyond those stories about
your exploits at the company Christmas party. Could be an e-commerce
initiative, a security overhaul or a top-to-bottom reorganization,
but make it a big one. As one survey respondent put it: "Be able
to point to something and say, 'I did that.'"
9. Sure, you'll be able to travel all you want when
life is a year-round holiday. But why wait until you've lost the
corporate American Express card to get started?
Pick out a trade show in some exotic locale. Go on the company
nickel.
Don't ask permission.
10. Finally, that '70s one-hit-wonder Dr. Hook may not
have had the 21st century network executive in mind when he penned
the band's lone hit "Cover of the Rolling Stone," but don't let
that stop you from taking to heart the song's defining lyric:
"We keep getting richer, but we can't get our picture
On the cover of the Rolling Stone ..."
Since your best rock 'n' roll days are over, forget about Rolling
Stone. You definitely should be shooting to get your mug on
the cover of Network World. You'll want to buy five copies
for your mother.
Related links
Tech
Corps An organization that helps you volunteer your time and expertise
in schools in your community.
Tech Corps
Voluntech.org See how pros in the New York area donate their time.
Voluntech.org
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