I remember when back in 2001 my friend and former SQL Server 
MVP Carlos Eduardo Rojas was busy earning his MVP street-cred in the NNTP 
forums, aka Newsgroups. I always thought he was playing the Sheriff trying to 
put some order in a Wild Wild West town by trying to understand what these 
people were asking. He spent a lot of time doing this stuff – and I thought it 
was just plain crazy. After all, he was doing it for free. What was he gaining 
from all of that work?
It was not until the advent of Twitter and #SQLHelp that I realized the 
real gain behind helping others. Forget about the glory and the laurels of 
others thanking you (and thinking you’re the best thing ever – ha!), or whatever 
award with whatever three letter acronym might be given to you. 
It’s about what you learn in the process of helping 
others.
See, when you teach something, it’s usually at a fixed date and 
time, and on a specific topic. But helping others with their issues or general 
questions is something that goes on 24x7, on whatever topic under the sun. Just 
go look at sites like DBA.StackExchange.com, or the SQLServerCentral forums. It’s 
questions coming in literally non-stop from all corners or the world. And yet a 
lot of people are willing to help you, regardless of who you are, where you come 
from, or what time of day it is. 
And in my case, this process of helping others usually leads to 
me learning something new. Especially in those cases where the question isn’t 
really something I’m good at. The delicate part comes when you’re ready to give 
an answer, but you’re not sure. Often times I’ll try to validate with Internet 
searches and what have you. Often times I’ll throw in a question mark at the end 
of the answer, so as not to look authoritative, but rather suggestive. But as 
time passes by, you get more and more comfortable with that topic. And that’s 
the real gain.
 I have done this for many years now on #SQLHelp, which is my 
preferred vehicle for providing assistance. I cannot tell you how much I’ve 
learned from it. By helping others, by watching others help. It’s all knowledge 
and experience you gain…and you might not be getting all that in your day job 
today. Such thing, my dear reader, is invaluable. It’s what will differentiate 
yours amongst a pack of resumes. It’s what will get you places. Take it from me 
- a guy who, like you, knew nothing about SQL Server.