Redundant at 40 cant get a equivalent job, what to do next?

Redundant at 40 cant get a equivalent job, what to do next?

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CraigNewmarket

Original Poster:

167 posts

151 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Career change at 40? IT Helpdesk background

Ive been made redundant after 18 years as the single IT support person in a company and it appears through job interviews ive been living a goldfish bowl IT wise. I have experience of IT support but not with modern systems only the old systems in my old job.

Im happy to change career and start at the bottom of the ladder but I need to be earning 35k within a few years. I cant work shifts or weekends due to childcare reasons.

I dont have a degree or any modern qualifications just 5 A-C GCSES including maths and English.

I have no idea where to start or what I should be looking to do.

Any advice please?


bitchstewie

58,998 posts

225 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
I suppose start with the obvious (to me) which is what do you like and enjoy doing?

I'm a big believer that if you can get lucky enough to find a job doing something you enjoy it's much more enjoyable than doing some random thing that you're only doing for the money.

On the IT front what sort of stuff have you been asked?

Just curious as you do sometimes see the definition of "IT Support" stretched quite a lot.

YMMV of course smile

CraigNewmarket

Original Poster:

167 posts

151 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
bhstewie said:
I suppose start with the obvious (to me) which is what do you like and enjoy doing?

I'm a big believer that if you can get lucky enough to find a job doing something you enjoy it's much more enjoyable than doing some random thing that you're only doing for the money.

On the IT front what sort of stuff have you been asked?

Just curious as you do sometimes see the definition of "IT Support" stretched quite a lot.

YMMV of course smile
Ive been the sole IT support in a company for 18 years, looking after desktops, Laptops, ipads on a domain. From Windows XP to Windows 10/11, Windows server 2003 to
Windows server 2025.

Rough101

2,715 posts

90 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
That sounds like the kind of thing deskside support IT do in the bigger firms smaller offices, or that contract style IT firms do for multiple companies running round in a van doing the jobs you can’t do remotely.

bitchstewie

58,998 posts

225 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
CraigNewmarket said:
Ive been the sole IT support in a company for 18 years, looking after desktops, Laptops, ipads on a domain. From Windows XP to Windows 10/11, Windows server 2003 to
Windows server 2025.
Do you mean those are the things you do or that's the kind of stuff you're being asked about?

There isn't a single definition of "IT Support" but server stuff might be considered pushing the boundaries depending what the ask is.

lrdisco

1,617 posts

102 months

Wednesday
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CraigNewmarket said:
Career change at 40? IT Helpdesk background

Ive been made redundant after 18 years as the single IT support person in a company and it appears through job interviews ive been living a goldfish bowl IT wise. I have experience of IT support but not with modern systems only the old systems in my old job.

Im happy to change career and start at the bottom of the ladder but I need to be earning 35k within a few years. I cant work shifts or weekends due to childcare reasons.

I dont have a degree or any modern qualifications just 5 A-C GCSES including maths and English.

I have no idea where to start or what I should be looking to do.

Any advice please?
Do a NEBOSH General certificate course. Get in to H&S. Advisors start on £35-40k.
After 3-5 years H&S managers are on £45-70k plus.
IT skills are really important and will set you ahead of many others.
Happy to help.

CraigNewmarket

Original Poster:

167 posts

151 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
lrdisco said:
Do a NEBOSH General certificate course. Get in to H&S. Advisors start on £35-40k.
After 3-5 years H&S managers are on £45-70k plus.
IT skills are really important and will set you ahead of many others.
Happy to help.
Thankyou so job title would be H&S advisor? Or trainee or H&S assistant?

lrdisco

1,617 posts

102 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
CraigNewmarket said:
Thankyou so job title would be H&S advisor? Or trainee or H&S assistant?
H&S advisor. There are lots of places to get a start.
Have a look on Indeed. Lots of roles at £40k plus.
Make yourself very employable. Do a 3 day first aid course, driving licence, accident investigation course. Behavioural safety. Learn how to do a quality Risk Assessment.
Get free daily updates from the HSE.
Join IOSH.
Work LinkedIn and get lots of connections.

paddy1970

1,118 posts

124 months

Wednesday
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Leveraging your IT background:

Business Analyst roles - Many companies need people who understand both technology and business processes. Your experience supporting users gives you insight into how systems actually work in practice

Project coordination/management - IT support teaches you to juggle multiple priorities and communicate with different stakeholders

Technical sales or account management - Your ability to explain technical concepts to non-technical people is valuable

Training and documentation - Creating user guides, delivering software training, or working for training companies

andyb28

925 posts

133 months

Wednesday
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Where are you based?

Monkeylegend

27,781 posts

246 months

Wednesday
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andyb28 said:
Where are you based?
I would guess somewhere near Newmarket.

dundarach

5,691 posts

243 months

Wednesday
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Same role in a school setting / group of schools in a trust?

Driving instructor


Evanivitch

24,519 posts

137 months

Wednesday
quotequote all
Look into Cloud Certificates. Loads of growth at the moment, and it's really not that difficult. Amazon (AWS), Google, can do Azure but don't prioritise it, look into Oracle too with big expansion.

Basically loads of LDAP and Virtual Machine setup. You can specialise lots too.

andyb28

925 posts

133 months

Thursday
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Monkeylegend said:
andyb28 said:
Where are you based?
I would guess somewhere near Newmarket.
Hehe, I did wonder if it was that obvious smile

Monkeylegend

27,781 posts

246 months

Thursday
quotequote all
andyb28 said:
Monkeylegend said:
andyb28 said:
Where are you based?
I would guess somewhere near Newmarket.
Hehe, I did wonder if it was that obvious smile
I did cheat a bit and looked at his profile which says Suffolk smile

captain_cynic

15,228 posts

110 months

Thursday
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CraigNewmarket said:
Ive been the sole IT support in a company for 18 years, looking after desktops, Laptops, ipads on a domain. From Windows XP to Windows 10/11, Windows server 2003 to
Windows server 2025.
Deliveroo driver? Only joking.

That sounds like the JD for an L2 helldesk/Wintel support/engineer role.

They start around £25K but can go above £35K as well as moving up to L3 which pays more.

ozzuk

1,315 posts

142 months

Thursday
quotequote all
In your position, if you want to stay in IT, I'd go contracting. Pick up low level hands and eyes/fields service/deployment type contracts (availability depends on where you are based) in parallel get your skills up with IT certs. Very long time since I've done this type of work, back in the day these roles attracted 120-150 day through umbrella company, no idea on current rates.

If you manage to keep the work coming in via contracts you could also look to build skills in own time to specialise - cyber security is a massive growth sector especially in the IT OT domain, look at some Gartner research (or NIST releases, cyber studies etc) to see the projection for industry spend growth and risk factor. Good luck!

Other ideas if you want to sack off IT...obv need to see how saturated your area is as these are common low barrier of entry type roles...Mobile detailer, window cleaner residential, window cleaner industrial, industrial cleaner; dog walker, dog trainer (some really decent money here esp if you have land and can over boarding training). Then you have the classics, retrain as plumber, plasterer, sparky, escapologist.

Edited by ozzuk on Thursday 24th July 11:25