The I.T. XP

The IT XP

Welcome to The Tech XP – the podcast that takes you inside the dynamic world of Information Technology. Whether you're coding the next big thing, managing enterprise systems, securing networks, or just the go-to "tech person" in your office, this show is for you. Technology is at the heart of every business, and IT professionals are the driving force behind it all. From cloud computing to on-prem solutions, software development to cybersecurity, we uncover the reality of working in IT—beyond the job titles and buzzwords. Ever feel like no one outside of IT understands what you do? Yeah, we get it. Your family might think you just "fix computers," but in reality, you're designing infrastructure, writing top-tier code, or keeping an entire organization's data secure. Whether you're a helpdesk analyst, software engineer, project manager, database admin, or wear multiple hats, this podcast pulls back the curtain on what it's really like to work in tech. Expect insights, stories, and real-world experiences that bridge the gap between enterprise IT and the ever-changing tech landscape. Join us as we break down the challenges, wins, and realities of life in IT—without the corporate jargon.

  1. 3H AGO

    Instruction Quality Is the New Leadership Skill

    _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> Chuck thought he was a pretty good delegator. Nearly 15 years of leading technology teams across complicated problems. Clear on the outcome, not just the task. Follow up without micromanaging. Sit down with the person when something goes sideways, find the disconnect, confirm in writing. _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> That system worked. Then he started delegating to agents. _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> This episode is the story of a Tuesday afternoon reconciliation task that came back completed but not done. The agent did exactly what it was asked. It pulled the data, performed the analysis, and returned the missing records. Just the missing records. No map. No context. No explanation of why the inconsistency existed. Chuck's team spent hours reconstructing what the agent had already touched. _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> A human would have asked before they got halfway through. The agent didn't ask because Chuck didn't tell it to. _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> That's delegation drift. Not a sudden failure. A slow slide between what you intended and what the agent interpreted, across dozens of small assignments, accumulating quietly until something surfaces that costs more to fix than it should have. _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> Chuck covers: _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> Why every management framework assumes a clarifying loop that disappears the moment you remove the human The signals you stop getting when a digital worker takes the assignment (no look, no pause in the hallway, no email that tips you off three days early) Why the 30% that's entirely human in the 70/30 principle is instruction quality at the moment of assignment The configuration drift parallel: same problem, different layer, and the same fix (infrastructure as code becomes instruction discipline) Why building ambiguity and clarification skills directly into your model is the structural answer to inconsistency What the future leader actually looks like: not a people person, a systems design thinker who can break down a business process into something a digital worker can execute without drifting _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> Chuck also shares what he found when his team started building their zero-touch automation platform, why "one agent to rule them all" is the wrong instinct, and what he's still inconsistent about today. _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> Next episode: AI agents don't just do work. They inherit your culture and scale it at machine speed. _*]:min-w-0 gap-3"> Full essay at techleadshift.com | Listen at theitxp.com

    40 min
  2. APR 23

    The Leadership Gap Nobody Is Talking About

    Chuck has been in IT for nearly three decades. He's watched technology shift from something only specialists understood to something everybody has in their pocket. And now he's watching something new happen in real time -- organizations deploying AI agents at full speed while nobody in the room asks the harder question: who's responsible for leading what comes next? In this episode, Chuck introduces his Tech Lead Shift leadership series and brings it to the IT XP audience for the first time. Drawing on his two master's degrees in management and leadership, and years of observing how hybrid teams actually function, he walks through why every leadership framework you know -- servant leadership, situational leadership, transformational leadership -- was built for humans and breaks when you point it at an AI agent. This isn't a conversation about tools. It's a conversation about the three quiet assumptions baked into every leadership model you were ever trained on -- and why all three are already broken. Chuck covers: The steering committee moment that started all of this: a slick demo, a nodding room, one question about security, and an answer of "we'll monitor it" that nobody pushed on Why servant leadership has nothing to serve when the worker has no ego, no career goals, and no emotional needs Why situational leadership collapses when the "individual" you're assessing is a model version and a prompt Why trying to inspire an AI agent is like trying to inspire your laptop Why AI agents don't add productivity tools to your organization -- they add amplifiers that inherit your culture and scale it at machine speed The accountability question nobody is asking: when the agent fails, who owns it? Chuck also shares what he's been building on his Tech Lead Shift Substack, how he's using AI to research and write the series, and a story about a LinkedIn post that unexpectedly made it back to his old team. Next episode: Delegation Drift. The afternoon his agent returned a "completed" task that cost his team most of a day -- and what it taught him about instruction quality as the new leadership skill. Check out the full series at techleadshift.substack.com | theitxp.com

    42 min
  3. 12/31/2025

    Stop Being an AI Skeptic: Why IT Pros Can't Afford to Wait

    After 25+ years in IT, Chuck shares his unfiltered 2-year AI journey—from skeptic to AI-first. Why 2026 is the year IT professionals can't afford to wait on AI experimentation. It's December 31st, 2025—the last day of the year and the final episode of 2025 for The IT XP. Chuck gets personal about his two-year journey with AI, from initial skepticism to becoming AI-first in his workflow and content creation. This isn't a polished how-to guide. It's an honest account of experimentation, failures, and lessons learned across ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, RunwayML, ElevenLabs, Sora, and emerging agentic AI tools. 🎯 WHAT YOU'LL LEARN: - Why experienced IT professionals (25+ years) bring irreplaceable value in an AI-augmented world - The real difference between generative AI and agentic AI—and what it means for your career - How to overcome AI hesitation and start experimenting (even if you're skeptical) - Corporate Hardcore case study: Building a content brand using AI-generated characters and video - Coco Live case study: Managing a high-volume TikTok account with AI automation - The "clarity principle"—why AI reflects your thinking, not replaces it - Custom instructions mastery: How to make AI tools actually useful for your specific needs - Why your judgment becomes MORE valuable, not less, as AI adoption increases 🔥 KEY INSIGHTS: "AI didn't replace me. It freed me to do the work only I can do." Chuck breaks down the 70/30 rule: AI handles 70% of repetitive work, but the last 30%—judgment, context, validation—is where experienced IT professionals prove their value. ⚠️ THE HARD TRUTHS: - Organizations are experimenting with "AI" solutions that aren't actually leveraging AI effectively - Instant gratification culture is killing long-term skill development - Junior engineers don't know what they don't know—experience matters more in an AI world - In 2025, not using AI doesn't make you cautious. It makes you slow. 📊 2026 PREDICTIONS: 1. AI agents go mainstream (it's already happening—Microsoft Ignite was wall-to-wall agents) 2. The IT skills gap flips: Demand shifts from cloud engineers to "AI orchestrators" who can direct AI to solve ops problems 3. Regulatory scrutiny intensifies: "The AI did it" won't fly in regulated industries 💪 THE CHALLENGE: Start January 2nd. Pick ONE task you hate. Let AI take the first pass. You'll either save time or learn something. Either way, you're building the skill that matters most in the next decade. This is a passion-driven episode from someone who's been in the trenches for 25+ years and sees the writing on the wall: experienced IT professionals have a choice. Adapt and leverage AI, or become "too expensive" without demonstrating new value. 🎙️ ABOUT THE IT XP: 10 years of unfiltered career advice, technology insights, and experience points for IT professionals. Not looking for top 10 podcast status—just trying to help one person avoid the mistakes Chuck made over 25+ years in corporate IT. --- 🔗 MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE: - Corporate Hardcore (@CorpHardcore on TikTok) - Chuck's AI-generated corporate satire series - Coco Live Highlights (@cocolivehighlights on TikTok) - High-volume content automation case study - Tools covered: ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, RunwayML, ElevenLabs, Sora, MCP servers 📅 Next Episode: Coming in 2026 If this resonated, share it with one IT professional still on the fence about AI. Let's make 2026 the year IT stops reacting and starts building.

    1 hr
  4. 12/25/2025

    Enterprise to Startup: The GitHub Recruitment Path

    After 17 years at a large utility company managing decade-long waterfall projects, Don Freeman made a radical pivot into the fast-paced world of Web3 startups—without ever applying for the job. In this episode of The IT XP, Don shares how his contributions to the Ethereum Foundation's web3.py library caught SonarX's attention and led to a complete career transformation. We explore the stark contrast between enterprise and startup life, from 10-year projects to 10-day sprints, and why Don believes your GitHub commits might be worth more than your next certification. This isn't about quitting your job for crypto—it's about the power of learning in public and taking initiative. Key Takeaways: The shift from 10-year waterfall projects to 10-day startup sprints (06:49) How documentation PRs evolved into a job offer from SonarX (04:30) Why "I've never found something I couldn't dig into and learn" is the ultimate career philosophy (07:42) The real difference between enterprise "decision trees" and startup autonomy (24:15) Why crossing team boundaries is the question enterprise people are afraid to ask (41:31) About Don Freeman: Don Freeman is a software engineer who transitioned from designing power lines and managing enterprise systems at a utility company to contributing to open source Web3 projects. His journey from Linux enthusiast in the '90s to startup engineer showcases the power of continuous learning and public contribution. Connect with Don: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/donald-freeman/ GitHub: https://github.com/dbfreem

    44 min
  5. 12/01/2025

    Microsoft Ignite 2025 Observations

    Chuck breaks down his first-ever Microsoft Ignite experience in San Francisco—from navigating the massive Moscone Center venue to cutting through the "Copilot everything" sales pitch. If you've wondered whether mega-conferences like Ignite are worth the hype (and the $400+/night hotel bill), this episode delivers the unfiltered reality check. What You'll Get: Conference logistics reality: 20,000 attendees, government ID checkpoints, buses to Chase Center for the keynote, and the eternal search for the Marriott Marquis session rooms Talk quality assessment: Why "advanced" sessions felt disappointingly high-level, and when sales-focused content actually serves smaller orgs better than enterprise teams already deep in Microsoft partnerships Azure AI Foundry & security focus: Chuck's key takeaways from the tracks that mattered most—plus what the vendor floor really delivers (spoiler: lots of socks) The Copilot/Agent saturation problem: How Microsoft's 2025 strategy mirrors Dell Tech World '23's AI frenzy, and what it means for your actual infrastructure work Bonus War Story (starts ~47:00): Chuck dissects a multi-day production outage where AI-armed stakeholders derailed troubleshooting—and shares the diplomatic strategies that kept tempers in check while solving the real capacity management issue. Critical lessons on handling aggressive personalities during high-pressure incidents, even when "Big Dick Todd" and "Big Dick Mary" show up with ChatGPT-fueled theories. Who This Is For: Sysadmins, infrastructure engineers, and IT leaders who need to separate conference theater from actionable intelligence—and who've ever dealt with non-technical stakeholders "helping" during outages. Key Timestamps: 00:00 – Ignite overview & Copilot saturation 02:15 – Venue logistics & San Francisco hotel costs 06:27 – Session quality: beginner vs. "advanced" 47:00 – Production outage war story: IOPS, firewalls & managing egos 52:21 – Handling aggressive personalities during incidents Subscribe to The I.T. XP for weekly unfiltered advice on navigating IT careers, industry shifts, and the real stories behind the buzzwords.

    56 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Welcome to The Tech XP – the podcast that takes you inside the dynamic world of Information Technology. Whether you're coding the next big thing, managing enterprise systems, securing networks, or just the go-to "tech person" in your office, this show is for you. Technology is at the heart of every business, and IT professionals are the driving force behind it all. From cloud computing to on-prem solutions, software development to cybersecurity, we uncover the reality of working in IT—beyond the job titles and buzzwords. Ever feel like no one outside of IT understands what you do? Yeah, we get it. Your family might think you just "fix computers," but in reality, you're designing infrastructure, writing top-tier code, or keeping an entire organization's data secure. Whether you're a helpdesk analyst, software engineer, project manager, database admin, or wear multiple hats, this podcast pulls back the curtain on what it's really like to work in tech. Expect insights, stories, and real-world experiences that bridge the gap between enterprise IT and the ever-changing tech landscape. Join us as we break down the challenges, wins, and realities of life in IT—without the corporate jargon.