Job Detour: Joining South Texas Communications

I have been lax in announcing another change in my employment. Recently I announced joining up with RGV Helpdesk. Well, within a week, RGV Helpdesk was in negotiations to join South Texas Communications. As a result, I had to re-interview for a job I already had. I was a bit hesitant at first because the job requires full-time involvement.

I have worked to build multiple sources of income, so going back to a single source of income causes me to hesitate. Still, the project that South Texas Communications is currently involved in made me want to be a part. Currently, we are working on a project to connect all the hospitals along the Rio Grande Valley with a private network that uses microwave bridges. Some of these network bridges will cross a street while others will cross many miles. I’ve not worked on this type of computer networking, so this is cool.

South Texas Communications has historically been a radio company. It has been in business for over 60 years. Much of their business depends on servicing city, county, and other government radio needs. They have roughly 75% of the radio market in our region. Furthermore, South Texas Communications is the leader in selling and servicing Motorola products in the RGV. Having said that, I know very little about radios. I’m a computer guy.

Why would they hire me? Well, it turns out that radio is increasingly integrating with computer networks. Carrying voice over radios is down to a science. Now, there is increasing demand for radio that can carry data. The radios are physically the same, but the infrastructure at the ends of the radios is more IT centric. That’s where RGV Helpdesk and I come in. We are there to fill the void where radio meets computer networks. Therefore, South Texas Communications will broaden the meaning of the Communications part in the name.

It was a tough decision for me to finally agree to join South Texas Communications. It is a fine company with a good track record. I think a few years back I would have jumped at the opportunity immediately. My hesitation mainly came from being comfortable where I was working for a State Representative and doing computer jobs on the side. I had steady income and access to important people throughout the state. I was ready to turn the job down. I even asked for a raise and got it. In the end, being comfortable is what changed my mind. If you are comfortable, you aren’t growing. I figure it is best to move out of my comfort zone and try to grow into something else.

In the coming month, I’ll be working on a big project that is both physically and mentally demanding. Afterwards, I’m sure that more challenges will be thrown my way. I don’t know what lies ahead exactly, details were rather vague, something about a career and opportunities. I don’t know about all that, nor care. I’m going to pick up some skills and put them to work alongside my existing skills. The key here is growth.

Those Bastards!

One thing that people have often used to hit me over the head is the quote, “Jack of all trades, master of none.” I have trouble focusing on any one field of study because everything is so damned interesting. I have never been really good, as in expert, at anything. I do, however, have a knack for seeing how things fit together. The point is, I often feel inadequate for never mastering a particular field of study before moving to a new one.

I was just reading Tim Ferriss’s blog in which he gives reasons why being a jack of all trades is a good thing. I can follow his reasoning and tend to agree, but I can’t just take his word for it. I then read the 2nd comment on his post, which has:

Allegedly the Jack of all trades saying is always taken out of context. The full saying is apparently:

Jack of all trades, master of none, though oft times better than master of one!

I looked it up for confirmation. Indeed, that is the full quote. What is more, people who are jacks of all trades are called polymaths, or Renaissance Men.

Now I feel dumb for listening to everybody who quickly spits out the incomplete jack of all trades quote. Now I know better and can finish the quote. I also won’t feel bad for having such wide-ranging interests.

Jerks.