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Have any of you ever tried to run from sharepoint? I've worked with sharepoint enough to know that it is not something that interests me. My interests are more along the lines of APIs / backend / distributed development. Have any of you found ways, as consultants, to move away from sharepoint and keep learning other things of interest? I'm currently in a position where sharepoint is in huge demand and I can't quite find a way to simply step aside from it. any suggestions ?

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Maybe you should point out that you're working for a consulting firm (or so I infer from your comment on @zmt's answer- you might get more focused answers that way. – cori Sep 23 '08 at 13:50

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If I infer correctly that you work for a consulting firm then find out what other kinds of things your firm works on. Learn those technologies better that the people who currently work on them for your firm, involve yourself in those projects, even if just in a hallway conversation manner, and come up with better (faster, cheaper) solutions for the problems your firm is solving.

Your options are really seem to be 3-fold

  1. convince your boss your talents would be better used elsewhere
  2. convince your co-workers they want you on those other teams
  3. convince your company's clients that they want you, specifically.
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Learn Java, or Ruby.

The Microsoft sales model of "attach" whereby they sell a solution comprised of multiple technologies and then sell the next solution on the basis of "well you have already invested in SharePoint so you already have the skills in place and the infrastructure for this new bit of technology we have" is here to stay... it's very successful.

SharePoint is cloud computing for business who have MS shops... you avoid it by not doing C#. If you're doing C# then given enough time, your apps will need to run in the corporate cloud and you should be looking after your career by embracing it.

Just my 2p. Sorry if it's not quite the answer you wanted.

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It's googd advice, as for the looking after my career part, this is exacly why i wish to move away from sharepoint, I do not see the value of this platform yet. I do find it has great potential but do not find it mature enough, this is primarily why i wish to put my energies else where i.e. .Net 3.5 – Alexandre Brisebois Sep 23 '08 at 13:33
Funny, because I'm beginning to move away from SharePoint as a core focus because of it's maturity. – spoon16 Sep 24 '08 at 0:22
spoon16 : you find it to be a very mature platform ? – Alexandre Brisebois Sep 24 '08 at 7:14
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Maybe you should turn down SharePoint contracts and accept contracts that interest you.

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not always possible when you are working for a consulting firm, it's a nice wish though – Alexandre Brisebois Sep 23 '08 at 13:33
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When life deals you lemons. Make Lemonade.

Seriously, if you are seeing SharePoint in such high demand, maybe working with the beast is the best idea. SharePoint is really just middle-ware. SharePoint can simply be a distribution point for your solutions (i.e., a user interface such as a web application can be hosted on SharePoint through a Web Content part). If you look at it, SharePoint may even prove useful as a document respository or small scale data store, in the form of lists.

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I completely agree, the benefits for the enterprise can be quite interesting. – Alexandre Brisebois Sep 23 '08 at 13:37
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Depending on the market you are in you can simply tell your boss at the consulting company you work for that your not interested in doing Sharepoint projects anymore and that you'll be forced to look elsewhere if they continue putting you on Sharepoint projects. That would work around West Michigan where the developer demand is high and the supply is sub-par.

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*note to self: look at job listings in West Michigan. – John Cocktoastan Sep 23 '08 at 17:29
Housing is probably pretty cheap as well. – spoon16 Sep 24 '08 at 0:23
This was going to become a possible next step in the next few weeks – Alexandre Brisebois Sep 24 '08 at 7:13
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I'm, on the other hand, just starting to use SharePoint to enreach my currently boring C#-only projects. I'm starting to use it as a front-end to the distributed and complicated systems: simple configuration and customization, reporting, management, system control - looks like all this is available in this package it it's easy to make is usable by non-techies and by beginners.

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