In this article
Welcome to systems administration
When the servers, networks, email, and systems an organisation runs on just work, a system administrator made that happen β and when they break, the sysadmin is who fixes them. It's a stable, hands-on IT career that's accessible without a degree and a strong springboard into cloud, DevOps, and security. Whether you're tech-curious or moving into IT, this guide covers what the job really involves, what you'll earn, and the honest upsides and downsides.
General description
A system administrator installs, configures, maintains, and secures an organisation's IT systems β servers, networks, operating systems, and core services. In simple terms: they keep the IT infrastructure running, secure, and recoverable. The work blends planned maintenance with fixing whatever breaks, often under pressure.
- Maintain servers, networks, and core services
- Manage users, access, and security
- Run backups and plan for recovery
- Troubleshoot and resolve outages
Key skills & qualifications
Hard skills
Soft skills
- Problem-solving β diagnosing issues calmly when systems are down
- Patience & methodicalness β working through problems step by step
- Communication β explaining tech to non-technical colleagues
- Reliability β people depend on the systems you keep running
- Calm under pressure β outages are stressful; clear heads fix them
- Continuous learning β IT never stops changing
Education & certifications
No degree required. The classic route is certifications plus a helpdesk or junior role, then growing into administration. Hands-on experience and certs matter more than a diploma.
Typical daily responsibilities
- Maintenance β patching, updates, and keeping systems healthy
- User & access management β accounts, permissions, and security
- Monitoring β watching systems and acting before users notice
- Troubleshooting β resolving outages and support escalations
- Backups β ensuring data is safe and recoverable
- Documentation β recording configurations and procedures
Responsibilities by seniority
Junior / Helpdesk
0β2 years experience
- Support tickets and basics
- User and account management
- Learning the environment
- Working toward certs
- Supervised maintenance
System Administrator
2β6 years experience
- Owning servers and services
- Independent troubleshooting
- Backups, security, and patching
- Scripting and automation
- On-call rotation
Senior / Infrastructure Lead
6+ years experience
- Designing infrastructure
- Cloud and migration projects
- Leading the IT team
- Strategy and budgets
- Mentoring and standards
Industries that hire sysadmins
π’ Enterprise IT
In-house IT keeping large organisations running β the classic setting.
π οΈ Managed service providers
MSPs supporting many client businesses β variety and fast learning.
π¦ Finance & regulated
High-uptime, high-security environments where reliability is everything.
π₯ Healthcare & public sector
Critical systems people genuinely depend on.
βοΈ Hosting & data centres
Running the infrastructure other companies build on.
π Education
Schools and universities with large, varied IT estates.
A day in the life
π’ In-house sysadmin
- One organisation, deep knowledge
- Mix of maintenance and support
- Known systems and users
- Planned projects
- On-call for outages
π οΈ MSP sysadmin
- Many clients and systems
- Fast variety and pace
- Broad, rapid learning
- Ticket-driven days
- Client communication
Check the monitoring dashboards and overnight backups β all green, good.
A user can't access a shared drive; you trace it to a permissions change and fix it in minutes.
Patching a batch of servers and scripting the rollout so you don't have to do it by hand next time.
Planning a migration to the cloud, the kind of project that's reshaping the role.
An alert: a disk is filling up; you clear it before it causes an outage.
Documentation and ticket cleanup. Most days, the best outcome is that nobody noticed anything β because everything just worked. That quiet competence is the appeal.
What this job gives you
- Accessible IT entry β break in via certs and a helpdesk role, no degree
- Stability β every organisation needs its IT kept running
- A launchpad β a proven path into cloud, DevOps, and security
- Variety β no two outages are the same
- Quiet impact β you keep the whole organisation working
Pros & cons
β Advantages
- Solid pay, no degree needed
- Accessible entry via certs
- Stable, broad demand
- Springboard to higher-paid roles
- Hands-on problem-solving
- Hybrid working common
- Transferable, lasting skills
β Disadvantages
- On-call and out-of-hours fixes
- Stressful during major outages
- Often only noticed when things break
- Constant learning required
- Cloud is shifting the role
- Can involve repetitive tickets
Salary potential β global rating
Rated against all professions globally, where β β β β β β β β β β = top 1% earners:
Career growth paths
- Senior Sysadmin / Infrastructure Lead β own the whole estate
- Cloud Engineer β move to AWS, Azure, or GCP infrastructure
- DevOps Engineer β automation, CI/CD, and modern operations
- Cybersecurity β specialise in protecting systems
- Network / Systems Architect β design large environments
- IT Manager β lead the IT function and strategy
Sysadmin vs related tech roles
Systems administration sits at the operations side of IT. Here's how the neighbours compare so you can see where you might head.
| Role | Core focus | Key tools | Pay vs sysadmin | Entry |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| System Administrator You are here |
Keeping IT systems running | Linux/Windows, networking | Baseline | Accessible |
| DevOps Engineer | Automating delivery and operations | Docker, Kubernetes, cloud | Higher | Hard |
| Cybersecurity Specialist | Protecting systems and data | Security tools, monitoring | Higher | Hard |
| Backend Developer | Building server-side software | Node/Python/Go, SQL | Higher | Medium |
| Network engineer | Designing and running networks | Routers, switches, firewalls | Similar | Medium |
Scroll the table sideways on mobile. Pay comparisons are directional and vary by market, company, and specialism.
Future outlook
The cloud has changed the job β much on-premise infrastructure now lives in AWS or Azure β but it hasn't removed the need for people who run systems. The role is evolving toward cloud and automation, not disappearing. Sysadmins who learn cloud and scripting are reinventing themselves into some of IT's best-paid roles.
- Cloud shifts where infrastructure lives, not the need to run it
- Automation and scripting are now core skills
- The path increasingly merges with cloud and DevOps
- Security responsibilities keep growing
- Every organisation still needs its systems kept running
Fun facts π€
There's an annual "SysAdmin Appreciation Day" β a tongue-in-cheek reminder that this job is usually invisible until something breaks.
"Have you tried turning it off and on again?" is a clichΓ© because, genuinely, a surprising share of issues really are fixed that way.
The golden rule of the trade is "3-2-1 backups" β and every veteran sysadmin has a horror story about the one backup that didn't work.
Many of today's top cloud and DevOps engineers started as sysadmins β it's one of IT's most reliable career springboards.
Major upgrades often happen at 2am on a weekend β sysadmins quietly keep the digital world running while everyone else sleeps.
Myths about systems administration
"The cloud has killed the sysadmin."
β False. It changed where infrastructure lives, but someone still has to design, run, and secure it. The role is evolving into cloud and DevOps, not vanishing.
"You need a CS degree."
β False. Certifications and hands-on experience (often via helpdesk) get most people in. It's one of IT's most degree-flexible roles.
"It's just resetting passwords."
β False. That's helpdesk. Sysadmins manage servers, networks, security, and recovery β the infrastructure a whole organisation depends on.
"It's a dead-end job."
β False. It's a launchpad β to cloud, DevOps, security, architecture, and IT management.
"If it's quiet, you're not needed."
β Reality: A quiet day means the systems are healthy β which is exactly what a good sysadmin works hard to achieve.
Is this job right for you?
β Good fit if you...
- Enjoy fixing and tinkering with tech
- Are methodical and patient
- Stay calm under pressure
- Like a mix of routine and problem-solving
- Want an accessible IT entry
- Happily keep learning
β Maybe not for you if...
- On-call disruption isn't for you
- Outage pressure would overwhelm you
- You want only creative work
- You dislike documentation
- You need constant recognition
- You prefer purely offline work
Freelance & IT consulting
Experienced sysadmins can work independently β as IT consultants or by running a small managed-service business for local companies.
β Independent advantages
- Recurring support contracts
- Serve several small businesses
- Good rates for scarce skills
- Build your own MSP
- Flexible, varied work
β Independent challenges
- You're responsible for clients' uptime
- Out-of-hours emergencies
- Admin, sales, and invoicing
- No salary or paid leave
- Keeping skills current yourself
Recommended path: build solid in-house or MSP experience and certifications, then move to consulting or your own managed-service business with reliable clients.
How to break into this field
- Learn the fundamentals β operating systems (Linux & Windows), networking, and how IT fits together.
- Get foundational certs β CompTIA A+, Network+, and a Microsoft or Linux cert.
- Build a home lab β practise with virtual machines and real configurations.
- Start at the helpdesk β the classic entry point that leads into administration.
- Add cloud & scripting β to grow into sysadmin and beyond, toward cloud/DevOps.
πΈ What it actually costs to start
Realistic time and money to an IT/sysadmin role. Figures are rough global guides and vary by country.
What to know before you start
- Helpdesk is the on-ramp β most sysadmins start there; it's not beneath you, it's the path.
- Learn to script β automating repetitive work is what makes you valuable.
- Embrace the cloud β it's where the role and the pay are heading.
- Document everything β your future self and your team will thank you.
- Backups are sacred β and an untested backup is not a backup.
- Expect some on-call β keeping systems up sometimes means odd hours.
What sysadmins wish they'd known
The same lessons come up again and again from people actually doing the job. A few worth hearing before you start:
I started on the helpdesk feeling like it was beneath me. It was actually the perfect foundation β I learned the whole environment and the people, and walked into a sysadmin role two years later.
System administrator Β· 5 years in, enterprise
Learning to script changed my career. The colleagues still doing everything by hand got stuck; automating my work freed me to learn cloud and double my salary.
Infrastructure lead Β· 9 years in, MSP
The cloud scared me until I leaned into it. Sysadmins who treat it as a threat get left behind; those who treat it as the next step end up in the best-paid jobs in IT.
Cloud engineer Β· 12 years in, finance