this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2026
66 points (97.1% liked)

Sysadmin

14396 readers
186 users here now

A community dedicated to the profession of IT Systems Administration

No generic Lemmy issue posts please! Posts about Lemmy belong in one of these communities:
!lemmy@lemmy.ml
!lemmyworld@lemmy.world
!lemmy_support@lemmy.ml
!support@lemmy.world

founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
 

Hello!

Sorry in advance for quite a long post but I am unsure how to explain everything without writing it all down here... so thank you and please bare with me! :)

I've just started a new job as junior IT sysadmin and am trying to figure out whether my worries are normal or if this is just what some smaller companies are like and everything is ok.

During the hiring they've told me they have no internal IT department and relies only on 2 external IT people: -1 consultant who sometimes helps with sharepoint -1 sysadmin who manages everything but also works fulltime for another company They've also mentioned they had recently migrated to M365 and that the migration has caused all kinds of issues with permissions, access rights, and overall administration. It sounded very messy but also interesting, so I still accepted the offer thinking I will have to deal mostly with M365.

Now I've started this job and got to know that comany's CEO is apparently quite controlling and wants to know and see everything. He is also a Global admin in M365 and has additional high privilege roles assigned. I've also learned that the expectations now seems much bigger than what I would normally think that only a junior sysadmin alone should do since they expect me to: -help with sharepoint administration and it's structure -manage and redesign existing M365 permissions and access -communicate with all departments to understand their workflows, requirements and software that they use -review entire companys IT infrastructure -potentially introduce company wide AI and security policies -work with and administrate MS Dynamics and PowerBI (I told them that I have no or almost no experience with those) -work with integrations between sales platforms and internal systems -participate in and maybe even lead future CRM migration (no more info) -help with creating a document management system because they currently don't have it -potentially introduce on prem servers in future

At this moment I have only sharepoint permissions in M365, which are nowhere near enough for many tasks I'm being asked to help with not to mention that I have no admin access in my computer either. I've requested necessary access to actually do tasks they're expecting from me from the external sysadmin. I asked for global admin and local admin rights, providing detailed info in an email for why I need them. I've also cc'd my manager (that's not even related to IT) to document everything. The external sysadmin just sorta ignored me by only replying that they wish to meet up sometime later so I still have no access. I honestly don't get how I'm supposed to manage systems if I cannot even access them or see what's inside normally...

I also asked my manager a fairly direct question the other day: 'If the company needs all of this why did you hire specifically just a junior sysadmin instead of an experienced IT manager or some senior sysadmin?' The answer I got was that they want to 'grow a person internally alongside the company needs'... Then I pointed out that someone with more experience would make less mistakes and be able to set everything properly. The response then was basically that they are not afraid of mistakes because they're an RnD company where mistakes are normal. They also said that they didn't want someone who would come in and 'do everything their own way'.... like wtf..? That answer then left me confused and speechless because things like permissions, security, infrastructure and stuff already have best practices for a reason!

So...is this a normal situation for smaller companies that are building their internal IT for the first time? Is this an actual growth opportunity and I'm just worrying for nothing..? Would you guys be concerned and think about exiting already? I'm simply very confused on what's the right thing to do...

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] FreedomAdvocate 1 points 9 hours ago

You've got a few options:

  • try and do the job to the best of your abilities, learning as you go, while making yourself invaluable to the company and then making sure you use that to your advantage to get promotions and wage increases.

  • say it's not what you were hired to do and leave or get fired for not doing the job, then go try find another job.

That's pretty much it. Unfortunately, jobs are very rarely what they were advertised as, generally being expected to do a lot more than you were told. You won't get anywhere by saying "not my job" or "I wasn't hired to do that". You either do it, or someone else will while you go back to unemployment.