Open Networking Hour – career in tech

Diversity, equality and inclusion should be super important topics for all of us. Not just to have more diverse perspectives in a team or company. Being inclusive needs to be “built-in” in our actions, not just an afterthought. And equal pay should be the standard for equal work – it’s that simple. These are fundamental principles around how VMware operates. And while we do a lot from a corporate perspective, I believe every individual action contributes to the greater good. 

September 2022 marked twelve years at VMware for me. I have the privilege to work with so many amazing people across organizations and get to see so many interesting things in my daily work. Also, I am always inspired when I meet all these great people from really diverse (lots of non-tech) backgrounds that come together in IT – and how this diversity makes literally everything so much better! I’d love give something back, share my experience – and also listen and learn from all the fantastic experiences and perspectives out there.

Tell me more… what experience can you share, Bjoern?

For those of you that don’t know me. I studied computer science and telecommunications, I was a user (and VMware customer) for several years, I support customers on their overall digital transformation journey as well as specific IT projects, I am a regular speaker at various types of events, I host a podcast, I also get to host a regional meetup around cloud-native technologies such as Kubernetes but I also get to spend time in practical Design Thinking exercises. My current role is Principal Technologist at VMware and I am part of the leadership team for Central Europe, Middle East and Africa. 

Here is my offer to you! 

I have been thinking about how to help people outside of VMware with their career in tech and I decided to offer one hour every week as an “Open Networking Hour” (if you have a better name, let me know :)) to anyone on my network or e.g. on my network’s network. What do I mean by that? Someone you know (or you!)…

  • … is looking for ideas or insights around how to start or build out a career in tech?
  • … might not really understand what a certain job in tech actually is about and that many don’t require programming or computer science backgrounds at all?
  • … wants to know more about VMware or about working at VMware?
  • … would benefit from an introduction to someone on my network?
  • … just wants to bounce ideas?

How do we do this? 

Let’s have a chat! I set up a calendly account and offer 2x 30min slots each week. Once you sign up there, you’ll get a link to a zoom meeting for the date you selected. And to strengthen diversity specifically, one of the two 30min slots is reserved for females or non-binary people: https://calendly.com/bbrundert

To all my fellow VMware colleagues that are interested in something similar, please feel free to reach out via our internal channels!

I am really excited to see where this goes and look forward to hopefully lots of interesting conversations! Don’t be shy!

VMworld 2016 – General Session recordings available on Youtube

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VMworld 2016 in Las Vegas is over and there is a ton of content available already. The General Sessions (Monday & Tuesday) give a great overview about key announcements and especially the keynote from Monday goes beyond VMware technology and takes a look at the future of IT. Pat Gelsinger also introduced VMware Cloud Foundation and the Cross-Cloud Architecture:


VMworld 2016 – Session Recordings available to everyone!

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I just got back from a fantastic VMworld 2016 in Las Vegas and want to share some very good news with you. The team has already put VMworld session recordings online (540+ recordings so far!) – and this time, they will be accessible to everyone.

So if you were not able to attend VMworld in Las Vegas or want to review some of the announcements in more detail, you can head over to VMworld.com and check out the content anytime. It’s also a great preparation for VMworld in Barcelona later this year! Check out the Schedule Builder for VMworld Barcelona and prepare your experience today!

Links:

New VMware Hands-On Labs available!

I just came across the VMware Hands-On Labs website and was excited to see many great new labs available there. Check them out!

For starters:

A new group, focussed on IT outcomes:

SDDC Labs:

“The Phoenix Project” – book recommendation

Just a couple of weeks ago, I received a recommendation for the book “The Phoenix Project” (Amazon.com Link) that I want to reshare here today. It’s “A Novel About IT, DevOps, and Helping Your Business Win” and I really enjoyed reading this book. It tells the story of Bill, an IT manager inside the fictional company Parts Unlimited. Their challenges pretty much overlap with many topics addressed in VMware Cloud Operations.

On a regular Tuesday morning, Bill receives a call from the VP of HR and suddenly finds himself in the office of Parts Unlimited CEO Steve. Steve talks him into becoming the new VP of IT Operations, reporting directly to him. But this is not part of the usual promotion process. Bill is becoming VP after the previous CIO and VP of IT Operations were fired just hours ago. In a phase where Parts Unlimited is facing major competitive threats – and lots of IT issues. Besides numerous major outages, they have just two weeks until the release of their long-awaited Phoenix project. A project that CEO Steve expects to “close the gap with the competition”. Customers, shareholders and all employees of Parts Unlimited are waiting for this release. And it has to be a success, otherwise the company might even go out of business. Now, Steve expects Bill to run operations and launch Phoenix. But (of course) this project is already two years delayed and has cost more than $20 million. No pressure, Bill…

And so the story begins. Over time, Bill, Steve and many others are starting to realize where IT Operations and Development have room for improvement. But the business starts also to realize how many projects actually rely on IT.

With lots of great examples, the authors give practical insights on how a successful transition towards a more business-oriented IT delivery can be realized. Because in the end, IT is all about helping the business win.

Related links, I’d like to recommend as well: