https://cloudirregular.substack.com/p/every-engineer-should-do-a-stint Cloud IrregularCloud Irregular Subscribe * About * Archive * Help * Log in Every engineer should do a stint in consulting I will die on this hill. Forrest Brazeal 21 hr ago 2 4 Share Hacker News has many opinions about this post; read them Every software engineer and IT person should do a stint in consulting. I'm not talking about becoming one of those contractors who are billed out by their companies as "consultants" but are really just serial hired hands. I'm referring to a true consultant role, where you are paid to bring expertise, give advice, and drive technical change. There are a few different ways to land in a role like this: * Go into business for yourself, as an independent consultant. But running your own business involves a whole bunch of other skills like sales and networking. This post is mainly focused on how consulting helps you become a better engineer, so I won't spend much time on the independent option. * Work for a consulting firm in a senior-ish role. Depending on your specific flavor of experience, you may find a role like this easier to obtain in a giant corporation like Deloitte or Accenture, a boutique specialist shop like Trek10 (where I used to work) or somewhere in between. In any case, the "staff consultant" option gives you the engineering experience of consulting but removes the challenge of filling your own sales pipeline. * Work for a tech company in a customer-facing technical role: say, as a post-sales engineer or solutions architect. This option may have more behind-the-scenes continuity than the other two, but is fundamentally the same skillset. Whichever you choose, I believe that every engineer should spend a portion of their career doing one of those 3 things. Working as a consultant unlocks career gains that are difficult, if not impossible, to achieve as an in-house engineer or engineering leader. The Consultant Superpowers A bird's-eye view of the industry Once you've worked with a few clients, you'll realize that most of them aren't as unique and special as they think they are. They're facing the same organizational malaise and borrowing against the same technical debt as everybody else. You'll quickly start to become a professional pattern-matcher, applying things that worked in company X to the problem you see in company Y. To the extent that "best practices" in tech are a real thing, this is where they come from. I think I heard someone refer to this process of best-practices-emerging-through-consultancy as "thought laundering," which sounds awful but can actually be sort of cool. Over time, you get the opportunity to build a playbook for success in your discipline that works in, like, 80% of cases. Most people probably won't fully buy into your ideas, but you'll know they work. You'll know. Nobody can take that away from you. Working on high-impact projects You don't bring in a consultant to help you maintain the status quo, but to help you drive change. As a consultant, you won't be maintaining the old ActiveDirectory server. You'll be figuring out how to migrate 2,000 people onto Google Workspace. (See how I throw in little things like that, now that I work for Google? I'm such a shill. You should unsubscribe.) A good consulting gig is a constant stream of the most interesting projects on the market, a smorgasbord of tasty ways to improve your skills. Actually getting stuff done Sure, I know the stereotype that consultants are charlatans who leave things in a worse mess than they found them. On the other hand, doesn't that describe plenty of the people who work internally at your company as well? The difference is that consultants are brought in specifically because they have no allegiance to anyone other than the executive who hired them. They can skip the politics and just point out what needs to be done, even if it's obvious. Especially if it's obvious. It turns out that many of the changes companies need to make - whether technical or business-y - do not require obscure eureka moments or months of discovery. The smart people inside the company are probably aware of the elephants in the room already. They're just too trapped in bureaucracy and broken processes to fight back. This is how McKinsey can send 23-year-old analysts into the world's biggest companies and still be taken seriously. They're professional elephant-pointer-outers, not necessarily creative problem solvers. If you can work with a consultancy that engages at the executive level, you may find that you're able to get more done in a few weeks than your in-house counterparts could ever do on their own. Empathy for customer needs You won't be seven layers of teams away from the customer anymore, writing internal tooling and hoping everyone agrees you should still get paid. When you consult, there are zero filters between you and the effectiveness of your work. Consultants who don't deliver as promised don't last long. So you get good at listening, at documenting, at showing the value of your work. You learn to solve real problems, not fake ones - because that's how you get paid now. Improved "mean time to competence" on new skills You're not being paid consulting rates to learn on the job; your ramp-up time for any new technologies you encounter has to be extremely quick. Learning how to learn becomes a more important tool in your belt than any language or framework. Over time, this means you'll surprise yourself by how quickly you assimilate new information. I said a stint though, not necessarily a whole career Consulting has downsides, and they multiply the longer you stay in the field. Even assuming the ideal situation, with an honest team and cool clients, you'll start to deal with stuff like this: Constant project churn is fatiguing I mean, new projects are exciting, but at some point you just start to want to work on something familiar for a little bit. I genuinely don't know how people deal with this after, like, 20 years. Context-switching just strips your gears after awhile. No skin in the game You'll be graded on a short time horizon as a consultant. You'll meet your deliverables, get paid, and move on to the next gig. This limits the scope of the change projects you can be meaningfully involved with. It also decouples you from the long-term business outcomes of your work. Unless you have unusually epic relationships with your clients, you may someday find yourself wanting to be more of a player, less of a coach. Being a professional "expert" is hazardous to your growth Cops, politicians, and consultants have this curse in common: they're professionally incentivized to avoid admitting that they might be wrong. When you walk onto a client site, you're not there to learn, mess around, make mistakes, and try again. You're there to know more than the client, get things right the first time, and make the VP look smart for hiring you. I always found this to be a stressful and not particularly honest arrangement. I'm not an expert, I'm just a guy who reads the docs. I didn't like having to project an air of competence that I didn't always feel. Mainly because I was afraid I would eventually convince myself that I was an expert, too, and settle forever into the lowest point on the Dunning-Kruger curve. Billable hours are the worst Sorry, they just are. They suck. Paying for value aligns incentives better for everybody, and yet nobody wants to do it. So why consult? To wrap all of that up simply: while consulting is stressful and has weird incentives, it's also a shortcut to getting very senior, very fast. It's like mainlining 10 years of experience in a quarter of the time. You'll start to think about tech in a business context. You'll build your network. And when you do go back in-house, you'll be the well-traveled engineer whom everybody will look to for insight. I recommend to anyone who asks that they do at least a couple years of consulting at some point in their career. Be careful if you choose to work with a firm, though; plenty of them have richly-deserved reputations as "body shops" that burn up people in the service of horrible clients. I list some trusted consulting shops in my Best Jobs in Cloud updates, and suggest starting there. Links and events As mentioned above, I work at Google Cloud now! I tried to explain why on this podcast with Corey Quinn, but I think I should probably do a blog about it at some point as well. Staying uncomfortable is a key growth signal for me, and I definitely feel the scariness of leaving the warm and friendly AWS Hero community for the other cloud. More to come here. Also, the Cloud Resume Challenge is now a book and a hand-curated jobs newsletter. You can give both as a gift to the aspiring cloud engineer in your life - just click the little "gift" icon at checkout . We all got to this point in our careers because somebody took a chance on us; let's pay that chance forward. Just for fun You have superpowers! [https] 2 4 Share Subscribe - Previous [https] [ ] Create your profile [ ] Your name[ ]Your bio[ ] [ ][ ] Sign up for the newsletter Save & Post Comment Only paying subscribers can comment on this post Subscribe Already a paying subscriber? Log in Check your email For your security, we need to re-authenticate you. Click the link we sent to , or click here to log in. Antony Koch 12 hr ago This is precisely my experience. I firmly believe consulting helped me becoming a better engineer, but recently left to [https] join a product company for all the reasons listed. Great post. Reply Alex Gerulaitis 17 hr ago Spent 20+ years doing exactly that - albeit not in the cloud - and couldn't agree more. If engineers could spend just a little time facing actual customers - it'd be a different world. Gentler, kinder. Customers would be happier. (Engineers, too. That would be fewer engineers though. Where I work, it seems there are 20 engineers per "customer", nobody knows - or wants to know - what value they bring to the table and the waste is just through the roof. BTW "value" != "skillset" - which is I think one of the points of your [https] article.) Question: where can I find a mentor / assessor? I need an assessment (of my value to potential employers), pointers to what kind of a job, role, company I could and should look for, skills and habits I should work on, to land a role (data scientist, likely) I want to be in. I'd pay for it. (Not my firstborn or any of my cats though.) Thanks! Reply TopNewCommunityWhat is Cloud Irregular?About No posts Ready for more? [ ]Subscribe (c) 2021 Forrest Brazeal. See privacy, terms and information collection notice Publish on Substack Cloud Irregular is on Substack - the place for independent writing This site requires JavaScript to run correctly. Please turn on JavaScript or unblock scripts