In generaly the full IT staff (everybody, developers, operations staff, engineering, management, and the guys who actually don't do any work but attend meetings gathering it
) is equal to the number of servers.
Some more, some less, but it seems to work like that. At work we have 320 servers (mostly unix), 150 routers, god knows how many switches. Yes, after a certain point a network becomes rather complicated and that point is usually around 1000 active nodes/IPs.
Believe it or not this is considered a "small to medium-sized enterprise network". You can get so much bigger. Especially in the financial/banking/healthcare industries.
So titles run the gamot depending on mangement style and company.
Some more, some less, but it seems to work like that. At work we have 320 servers (mostly unix), 150 routers, god knows how many switches. Yes, after a certain point a network becomes rather complicated and that point is usually around 1000 active nodes/IPs.
Believe it or not this is considered a "small to medium-sized enterprise network". You can get so much bigger. Especially in the financial/banking/healthcare industries.
So titles run the gamot depending on mangement style and company.
