astro
05-01-2006, 08:19 PM
http://www.btas.com.au/images/new_logo.jpgMy company's currently looking for the following:
3x Engineers (trained in Alcatel, Avaya, Ericsson or NEC PABXs), and
3x Trainees.
The engineers are hard to come by, which is why my company's looking at putting on Trainees. The thought is that we take on 3 young Data engineers (preferably linux/hardware/NOC engineers), throw them in with an experienced field voice engineer for 2 months and then send them on a couple of Alcatel certification courses. Once they've gone through that 'initiation', they'll be ready for a company car and a field engineer on their business card.
We're based in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane and also have a dealer network that covers this big brown land.
We work on a wide range of systems. Mainly Alcatel PABXs, but also: NEC, Fujitsu, Ericsson, SOX, Cisco, Alcatel Data Switches, Rockwell, Avaya, Active Voice, Cyclades, Systems Solutions and a plethora of other third party products.
There's room for promotion to a field engineer's role after 2 months, and potentially promotion to the Technical Assistance Center, the Professional Services Department or the Projects Department after that.
Linux/Unix is a heavy part of a lot of our PABXs, so experience in this would be great, but not necessary. A decent logical thinking pattern is the best (yay for geeks!), as most problems can be fixed by looking at the problem logically.
If you're interested, check out http://www.btas.com.au and send your resume to me at lhenderson@btas.com.au. If you have any questions, please email me on the previous address and i'll gladly answer them.
The only drawback is that zgeek.com is banned at btas (thanks to me), but the fridge downstairs is almost always stocked with beer and the 4.30 drinks call is quite common.
3x Engineers (trained in Alcatel, Avaya, Ericsson or NEC PABXs), and
3x Trainees.
The engineers are hard to come by, which is why my company's looking at putting on Trainees. The thought is that we take on 3 young Data engineers (preferably linux/hardware/NOC engineers), throw them in with an experienced field voice engineer for 2 months and then send them on a couple of Alcatel certification courses. Once they've gone through that 'initiation', they'll be ready for a company car and a field engineer on their business card.
We're based in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane and also have a dealer network that covers this big brown land.
We work on a wide range of systems. Mainly Alcatel PABXs, but also: NEC, Fujitsu, Ericsson, SOX, Cisco, Alcatel Data Switches, Rockwell, Avaya, Active Voice, Cyclades, Systems Solutions and a plethora of other third party products.
There's room for promotion to a field engineer's role after 2 months, and potentially promotion to the Technical Assistance Center, the Professional Services Department or the Projects Department after that.
Linux/Unix is a heavy part of a lot of our PABXs, so experience in this would be great, but not necessary. A decent logical thinking pattern is the best (yay for geeks!), as most problems can be fixed by looking at the problem logically.
If you're interested, check out http://www.btas.com.au and send your resume to me at lhenderson@btas.com.au. If you have any questions, please email me on the previous address and i'll gladly answer them.
The only drawback is that zgeek.com is banned at btas (thanks to me), but the fridge downstairs is almost always stocked with beer and the 4.30 drinks call is quite common.