Ferdinand John Reinke's Resume (Last updated January 8th 2009)

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Ferdinand John Reinke

Enterprise-scale Directory & Infrastructure Architecture Executive

About Ferdinand

With years "playing with technology", he helps people achieve their objectives. "Un-kinking" Information Technology and Business Processes delivers the business results that executives know are "in there somewhere". Often it's about methodically tracking requirements and constraints to the Eureka moment. It's all about getting results.

Key Info

Position Desired Full Time
Willing to Relocate No
Commuting Distance Up to 30 miles
Acceptable Travel Up to 10% of the Time
U.S. Work Authorization U.S. Citizen
Eligible for U.S. Security Clearance Yes

Salary

Current Salary: $100,000 to $150,000
Desired Salary: $100,000 to $150,000

Interview

Where do you see yourself in 5 years? (05/25/2007)

My plan for the next five years is not another full-time "regular" job. (Unless the walmart greeter counts.) It'll be: investing, consulting, coaching, coding, teaching, writing, inventing, and learning. I think that I'll always be earning, because that's all I do. Too late to change now. The only way it happens is if someone has a classic disaster and is willing to take a chance on me to fix it.

Why did you choose this career? (05/25/2007)

In High School, I was open to take a chance. Took it, did well, and it set me in a “rut” / “groove” for the rest of my life. When I was in Manhattan Prep High School, one of the Christian Brothers from Manhattan College came in towards the end of my junior year and said he was interested in hiring some of us to work in the Manhattan College data center. To qualify, we had to learn something called a “computer language”. He’d teach us for an hour in the morning before class, we’d have to give up our lunch, and a few Saturdays. After 6 weeks of torture, we’d have an exam. He’d hire the top people for his datacenter at the stunning sum of $4 an hour. (It was a long time ago!). We could then have up to forty hours a week assuming we got working papers. (I already had my for my various summer jobs. My Mom thought “idle hands”! And I got to keep HALF of what I earned. I called her share GRAFT! The split was AFTER tax. Any wonder I HATE taxes!) Despite all my peers telling me I was nuts to “give up” all that time, I signed up. (Surprising since I was very subject to peer pressure.) I was motivated by the money! I jumped thru his hoops, and surprise surprise, despite being a smart but mediocre student, I was the top scorer in his test with a 98. I later learned that this was CDC’s Systems Programmming Test, CDC used to decide if they would allow customers to touch their operating system. The Brother had only gotten a 96 on it. (I still think the question I missed was ambiguous. And, told everyone why! NO good.) From there it was like I was in a groove. I made lots of money, met the Engineering Faculty of the College, decided to go Electrical Engineering, and was the Number #2 guru of the computer center. Sophomore Year of College, I met the fellow running the AT&T Treasury datacenter and found out that they were paying $14/hour. So I started to do both. I graduated (surprisingly) with the lowest index 2.0106 [It was the 6 that won!], won the anchor pool (~$400), and had the highest starting salary (AT&T made my a Senior Systems Programmer making 65k PLUS OVERTIME!?!) I was happy. The best time in my life! It set me on a path that I have been following ever since. I wonder how things would have been otherwise? But clearly, it was one of MY first conscious decisions (i.e., sacrifice time for training that translated to earning power). And, it turned out well? So I’d call it the best decision I ever made.

Cloud View

plan business problem information center services environment management security architecture network manager systems technology computer global operating process recovery data single risk budget managed user project owner infrastructure consulting corporate district units analysis department migration