259: What IT Professionals And Bridge Builders Should Have In Common with Tom Gilb

Published: July 20, 2020, midnight

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Phil\\u2019s guest on this episode of the IT Career Energizer podcast is Tom Gilb, the author of ten books and hundreds of papers on requirements, design, project management and related subjects. His ideas on requirements are the acknowledged basis for CMMi Level 4, which were based upon his pioneering book, \\u2018Software Metrics\\u2019, where he also coined that term.

Tom has lectured at universities across the globe, and has been a keynote speaker at multiple technical conferences. In 2012, he was named an Honorary Fellow of the British Computer Society.

Tom joins Phil today to discuss his extensive business journey, his outlook upon the analytical approach to solving problems, and why the future of IT may lie in adopting an engineering approach.

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KEY TAKEAWAYS:

(4:08) TOP CAREER TIP

Always try to volunteer to help people who may be facing a challenge. Gain permission to help, make friends and learn along the way. Even if you aren\\u2019t always successful, you will mark yourself out as a useful colleague.

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(9:08) WORST CAREER MOMENT

Tom tends not to think of his career in best or worst terms, but there have been scary moments. The most memorable involved his being asked to solve a complex problem by Israeli rocket scientists. Tom succeeded, despite his reservations, and was rewarded by having his computer confiscated!

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(14:15) CAREER HIGHLIGHT

Working in India, Tom was able to convince the workers there to increase the quality of their workmanship instead of selling themselves as the cheapest. Soon all the workers were accredited, and competing on a global scale, which in turn changed the face of IT services in India, which became a leading force.

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(19:20) THE FUTURE OF CAREERS IN I.T

We need to do better in terms of failure rates when it comes to IT projects, which often leaves our clients disappointed. By adopting engineering principles, we can increase our agility and reduce the failure rate to rubble. It\\u2019ll take time, but it is incredibly exciting.

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(22:42) THE REVEAL

What first attracted you to a career in I.T.? \\u2013 Being a typical nerd, Tom was attracted to IT because of the technical challenges and opportunities.

What\\u2019s the best career advice you received? \\u2013 No matter where you are career-wise, study. Keep on educating and training yourself.

What\\u2019s the worst career advice you received? \\u2013

What would you do if you started your career now? \\u2013 Invest in learning basic skills, hone them in practice, and be more open and alert to the prospect of radical change.

What are your current career objectives? \\u2013 To ensure that all the lessons learned during his long and varied career, can be taught and disseminated to the next generation.

What\\u2019s your number one non-technical skill? \\u2013 Quantification \\u2013 the ability to quantify any critical variable, and any other value.

How do you keep your own career energized? \\u2013 Always make sure you\\u2019re having fun and doing the things you love.

What do you do away from technology? \\u2013 Tom is an avid reader on all subjects, and tries to read around 35 books per year, as well as studying and absorbing history on television.

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(42:11) FINAL CAREER TIP

Select the guiding books you read very carefully. There are far too many IT books out there, containing poor advice. You can filter out the not-so-helpful ones by looking for authors who use case studies and proven data that resulted in successful outcomes.

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BEST MOMENTS\\xa0

(4:44) \\u2013 Tom- \\u201cI would use a combination of persistence and intelligence and creativity, and I would solve the problem that nobody else could solve\\u201d

(7:58) \\u2013 Tom - \\u201cWhere others give up and say \\u201cIt can\\u2019t be done\\u201d, say \\u201cWell that sounds like an interesting challenge\\u201d\\u201d

(17:53) \\u2013 Tom - \\u201cI was able, with simple observation, to participate in building up the whole Indian IT economy\\u201d

(22:33) \\u2013 Tom - \\u201cThere are still this 95% of people who persist in treating a large IT system as though it\\u2019s a programming problem\\u201d

(33:38) \\u2013 Tom - \\u201cYou need people and books to help ideas survive\\u201d

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ABOUT THE HOST \\u2013 PHIL BURGESS

Phil Burgess is an independent IT consultant who has spent the last 20 years helping organizations to design, develop, and implement software solutions.\\xa0 Phil has always had an interest in helping others to develop and advance their careers.\\xa0 And in 2017 Phil started the I.T. Career Energizer podcast to try to help as many people as possible to learn from the career advice and experiences of those that have been, and still are, on that same career journey.

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CONTACT THE HOST \\u2013 PHIL BURGESS

Phil can be contacted through the following Social Media platforms:

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Twitter: https://twitter.com/philtechcareer

LinkedIn: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/philburgess

Facebook: https://facebook.com/philtechcareer

Instagram: https://instagram.com/philtechcareer

Website: https://itcareerenergizer.com/contact

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Phil is also reachable by email at phil@itcareerenergizer.com and via the podcast\\u2019s website, https://itcareerenergizer.com

Join the I.T. Career Energizer Community on Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/groups/ITCareerEnergizer

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ABOUT THE GUEST \\u2013 TOM GILB

Tom Gilb is the author of ten books, and a specialist in requirements, design and project management. He has acted as keynote speaker at technical conferences around the world, and in 2012, wwas named an Honorary Fellow of the British Computer Society.

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CONTACT THE GUEST \\u2013 TOM GILB

Tom Gilb can be contacted through the following Social Media platforms:

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Twitter: https://twitter.com/imtomgilb

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/tomgilb

Website: https://www.gilb.com

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