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Telecommunications Equipment Installer/Repairer

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AVG. SALARY

$77,970

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EDUCATION

Post-secondary training +

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Interviews

Insider Info

Mike Keating is the technical operations manager for a phone service provider in northern California. He started working in the telecom industry right after he graduated from high school. His dad landed him a job wiring large apartment complexes as part of a three-person team. The work was exhausting, but Keating liked it.

"It was my first real job, and I enjoyed the physical work. And I enjoyed working as a team with other people."

His next job was to install keypad phones, and private phone exchanges -- cutting-edge technology at the time. Keating eventually earned a bachelor's degree in management sciences by taking night classes and working during the day.

He now spends most of his time in an office, making sure that the right equipment is in the right place at the right time. But Keating must still be on top of the newest telecom technology.

"I work hard keeping up with the changes in technology and the direction that the business is going," he says. And he says anybody who wants to work in the telecom industry must do the same.

"Don't expect a company that hired you to spoon-feed you all of the education that you need," he says. "You need to take classes on your own. You need to learn new software and new platforms."

Donna Best certainly knows her way around the newest telecom technology and software. She works as a designer and analyst for a university. It maintains some 7,000 campus and nearby residential lines. Best has to keep an eye on the software that keeps all those users connected to the central server.

She also is responsible for connecting new users and buildings. And Best was part of the team that installed the current phone system less than two years ago.

"There are about 5,000 lines in the university, both analog and digital, and we had to design every line," she says. The job lasted about six months, and Best says she worked a lot of overtime. "But it was well worth it."

There is no question that Best enjoys her career in the telecom industry. "It's leading edge," she says. "If you are not in the telecommunications industry, you are not going anywhere."

And if you want to go anywhere in the telecom industry, you have to stay on top of new trends all the time, she says. "You don't want to go to a company that has old telephone systems," she says. "It's not going to get you anywhere. It's not going to get you to the front end."

Keating's career underscores that fact. Had he not kept up with the changes in technology, his career and life would have been different. But Keating is still not afraid of getting his hands dirty.

"I spent a week over in our...service area, helping the guys pull cables at a casino we are doing over," he says. "It was fun. I enjoyed it."

Elvis, however, was not playing there that week.

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