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Ask Slashdot: What's the Best Way to Retrain Old IT Workers?

A medium-sized company just hired a new IT manager who wants advice from the Slashdot community about their two remaining IT "gofers": These people have literally been here their entire "careers" and are now near retirement. Quite honestly, they do not have any experience other than reinstalling Windows, binding something to the domain and the occasional driver installation -- and are more than willing to admit this. Given many people are now using Macs and most servers/workstations are running Linux, they have literally lost complete control over the company, with most of these machines sitting around completely unmanaged.

Firing these people is nearly impossible. (They have a lot of goodwill within other departments, and they have quite literally worked there for more than 60 years combined.) So I've been tasked with attempting to retrain these people in the next six months. Given they still have to do work (imaging computers and fixing basic issues), what are the best ways of retraining them into basic network, Windows, Mac, Linux, and "cloud" first-level help desk support?

Monster_user had some suggestions -- for example, "Don't overtrain. Select and target areas where they will be able to provide a strong impact." Any other good advice?

Leave your best answers in the comments. What's the best way to retrain old IT workers?

3 of 343 comments (clear)

  1. Write systemd scripts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Seriously, this is going to be about as balanced a discussion as the previous systemd thread.

  2. Re:For crying out loud by Mr+Foobar · · Score: 3, Funny

    He ... HE ... her ... she ... she was fired.

    And your manager managed to get a sex-change in the middle of all that?

    --
    -> I dislike sigs...
  3. Re: What's the point? Here's the point by chubs · · Score: 3, Funny

    If you're going to be pedantic at least try to be pedantic about something that matters.

    If you are pedantic about something that matters, doesn't that mean you're no longer pedantic? Pedant, by its (not it's) very definition focuses on minor, unimportant details. That's like saying "If you're going to be a jerk, can't you at least be nice?"