Learn more about your community peers in our Member Spotlight!

MeredithW
Meraki Alumni (Retired)

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It’s time for our September Member spotlight!

 

For our sixth Member Spotlight, we chose to recognize @RumorConsumer. Since joining, he has written 104 posts and received 17 kudos! We've really enjoyed learning about the lovely retreat center!

 

Congratulations!🏅 👏

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Tell us a little bit about your background.

I have been into technology since I was young and worked for Fortune 500 tech giant for about 6 years before moving on to pursue other interests. My taste for technical challenges started early in life and I have always been the person who gets called on to help if something doesn’t work. I love solving problems and bringing flow back where there isn’t any. I started managing a Meraki network at a retreat center where I now live and was initially quite averse to it. It seemed irritatingly finicky and generally unstable. I decided to start reading the manuals and discovered that some things hadn't been set up quite right and began straightening the network out. It now purrs like a kitty cat.

 

How does the community help you in your day-to-day work?

The community has been an invaluable resource. I have come to rely on the community for insights and experience from people who have had boots on the ground for lord knows how long. People like that with real world experience are priceless. @PhilipDAth, @BrechtSchamp, @BlakeRichardson, and @NolanHerring  have been simply incredible in terms of helping me understand how to make my network work as well as possible. These guys are my heroes. I often get a knowledgable response within an hour to many of my questions which is simply unheard of.

 

What’s your advice to folks looking to move to the next level in their Meraki / networking knowledge?

Keep reading the manuals. Keep asking. Search first, but ask as many questions as you have. You will be helping yourself and building the wealth of information and expertise we have here. Test it in real life. Buy hardware you don’t understand and use it, play with it, and if you don’t want to keep it return it. If it’s good you should want to keep it. 

 

What would you say to those who haven’t yet gotten involved with the community?

If you haven’t gotten involved in the community you are either: 
 
a) using a very simple network and don’t need help which is fine
b) probably not getting the most out of what you’ve got
c) have an elegant amazing network and are hoarding all your knowledge so get in here and share what you got! You only keep it by giving it away.

 

 

Thanks, @RumorConsumerWant to nominate one of your fellow community members for next month's spotlight? Submit your nomination here!

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