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Every office has one.
You know exactly who I’m talking about.
They’re not in IT.
They weren’t hired for IT.
They may not even like IT.
But somehow, they’ve become the office’s unofficial tech support department.
Need a printer connected?
Ask Dave.
Can’t get into email?
Monitor won’t turn on?
Nobody knows exactly how it happened.
One day Dave fixed a paper jam, helped someone reconnect to Wi-Fi, or built a gaming PC at home…
And from that moment forward, Dave became “the computer guy.”
The journey is surprisingly predictable.
Someone has a minor computer issue.
Dave helps.
The issue gets fixed.
Word spreads.
Soon people are stopping by Dave’s desk several times a day asking questions that have absolutely nothing to do with Dave’s actual job.
And because Dave is a good person, he tries to help.
At first it seems harmless.
But over time, those little interruptions add up.
Five minutes here.
Ten minutes there.
A quick printer fix.
A password reset attempt.
A mysterious Wi-Fi issue.
Before long, Dave is spending hours every month solving technology problems instead of doing the job he was actually hired to do.
And that’s costing the business money.
This is where things get tricky.
A helpful employee can often solve simple issues.
But modern business technology involves much more than:
It also includes:
Those aren’t tasks that should be handled between spreadsheet updates and customer calls.
The unofficial computer guy isn’t the problem.
The problem is when the business starts relying on them for critical technology decisions.
That’s when things like this happen:
Not because anyone did anything wrong.
Because they were trying to solve problems without the tools, training, or time to manage them properly.
One of the biggest differences between professional IT and the office computer guy is focus.
The office computer guy fixes problems after they happen.
Professional IT works to prevent them from happening in the first place.
That means:
It’s a completely different approach.
Every business has a computer guy.
And honestly, they’re usually trying their best.
But technology has become too important—and too complicated—to manage as a side job.
Your accountant should be doing accounting.
Your operations manager should be managing operations.
And your unofficial computer guy should be free to focus on the work they were hired to do.
Because when technology becomes critical to your business, it deserves professional attention.
If your business relies on an unofficial computer guy to keep things running, it may be time to take some of that responsibility off their shoulders.
We’re always happy to help.
We publish practical, real-world IT tips every Monday.
👉 Subscribe to the CloudCore blog and stay ahead of small issues before they turn into big problems.
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💻 Why Every Business Has a “Computer Guy” (And Why It’s Usually the Wrong Person)
Every office has one.
You know exactly who I’m talking about.
They’re not in IT.
They weren’t hired for IT.
They may not even like IT.
But somehow, they’ve become the office’s unofficial tech support department.
Need a printer connected?
Ask Dave.
Can’t get into email?
Ask Dave.
Monitor won’t turn on?
Ask Dave.
Nobody knows exactly how it happened.
One day Dave fixed a paper jam, helped someone reconnect to Wi-Fi, or built a gaming PC at home…
And from that moment forward, Dave became “the computer guy.”
😄 How It Usually Starts
The journey is surprisingly predictable.
Someone has a minor computer issue.
Dave helps.
The issue gets fixed.
Word spreads.
Soon people are stopping by Dave’s desk several times a day asking questions that have absolutely nothing to do with Dave’s actual job.
And because Dave is a good person, he tries to help.
⏰ The Hidden Cost
At first it seems harmless.
But over time, those little interruptions add up.
Five minutes here.
Ten minutes there.
A quick printer fix.
A password reset attempt.
A mysterious Wi-Fi issue.
Before long, Dave is spending hours every month solving technology problems instead of doing the job he was actually hired to do.
And that’s costing the business money.
🔧 Fixing Problems Isn’t the Same as Managing Technology
This is where things get tricky.
A helpful employee can often solve simple issues.
But modern business technology involves much more than:
It also includes:
Those aren’t tasks that should be handled between spreadsheet updates and customer calls.
🛡️ Good Intentions Can Create Risk
The unofficial computer guy isn’t the problem.
The problem is when the business starts relying on them for critical technology decisions.
That’s when things like this happen:
Not because anyone did anything wrong.
Because they were trying to solve problems without the tools, training, or time to manage them properly.
📈 Professional IT Is About Prevention
One of the biggest differences between professional IT and the office computer guy is focus.
The office computer guy fixes problems after they happen.
Professional IT works to prevent them from happening in the first place.
That means:
It’s a completely different approach.
☕ The Takeaway
Every business has a computer guy.
And honestly, they’re usually trying their best.
But technology has become too important—and too complicated—to manage as a side job.
Your accountant should be doing accounting.
Your operations manager should be managing operations.
And your unofficial computer guy should be free to focus on the work they were hired to do.
Because when technology becomes critical to your business, it deserves professional attention.
If your business relies on an unofficial computer guy to keep things running, it may be time to take some of that responsibility off their shoulders.
We’re always happy to help.
📬 Stay in the Loop
We publish practical, real-world IT tips every Monday.
👉 Subscribe to the CloudCore blog and stay ahead of small issues before they turn into big problems.
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