IT Instructor
Give classes in information technology.
Modern-day buildings aren’t just structures. They’re organisms. Along with a skeleton and skin—the framing and façade—they have entire systems inside them, including central nervous systems devoted to information technology.
As a Systems Architect—an Information Systems Architect, in particular—that system’s your livelihood. Like a Neurologist who specializes in the flow of information from brain to body, a Systems Architect designs infrastructural networks that allow building tenants to efficiently and effectively access and interface with technology.
Using the principles of architecture, you design networks of computers. Part of an internal or outsourced IT department, you consider a company’s business objectives, size, budget, and resources in order to determine what kind of computing power it needs, how much data storage it requires, the desired size and speeds of its network, and the optimum user experience it wants to create for employees.
In pursuit of powerful IT systems, you make decisions about the types and numbers of computers and servers in a network; the number and capacity of hard drives built into the system; the physical configuration and layout of hardware; and the picking and placement of cables, switches, and routers—all of which can impact IT access, performance, and cost.
Although you’re found most often in IT, you may also be employed as a Systems Architect in manufacturing, engineering and construction, designing production processes, or other pieces of physical or informational infrastructure.
Either way, your mission and method are the same: You analyze and organize resources in order to create systems that reduce costs and maximize productivity.
Logical Thinker: You take a step-by-step approach to analyze information and solve problems.
Flexible: You're open to change and think variety is the spice of life.
Trustworthy: You are known for your personal integrity and honesty.
Nationally: $48,000 – $119,000
Main education level: Bachelor's
source: US Dept of Labor