<homer>
Vice President....no, no...JUNIOR Vice President!
</homer>
MYK's suggestions are probably the best so far. Network Engineer or Systems Engineer cover pretty much what you do, are generic enough to cover anything else, and are terms people recognize...although I'm not sure what the current thinking is on using the term Engineer when you don't have an iron ring or drive a train. If you work with a bunch of engineers they may scoff at your title. I still see nothing wrong with it though.
Some pretty funny stuff in this blog posting. Caution there is a bad word in the title, so cover your eyes.
http://www.mpdailyfix.com/2007/04/im_a_huge_fan_of.html
Or this:
Quote:
In the Robert Half Technology Survey, CIOs ranked Microsoft Windows Server 2002/2003 administration as the skill-set most in demand, followed by network administration and database management. That information squares neatly with the six IT job titles included the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ list of the 30 fastest growing occupations 2004-2014:
• #2 Network systems and data communications analysts (54.6 percent growth)
• #5 Computer software engineers, applications (48.4 percent growth)
• #8 Computer software engineers, systems software (43.0 percent growth)
• #11 Network and computer systems administrators (38.4 percent growth)
• #12 Database administrators (38.2 percent growth)
• #25 Computer systems analysts (31.4 percent growth)
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http://itmanagement.earthweb.com/article.php/3654856
And if all else fails:
http://dithered.chadlindstrom.ca/attic/job_titles.html