I was Part time Technical Staff, then Technician, then an acting Post Doc (Without the Doc!) then made it to "hard" money as an Instrumentation technician, then a Senior Technician at a mediocre research school with 22,000 Students before its decline.
My advice, unless taking advantage of the free education for you or your family, is work there 4-5 years and move on or move laterally to administration. Learn everything you can, teach your self new things, take advantage of the on-line and off-line libraries. Unless you are getting the valuable old school State Employees Retirement as a reason to stay, they will work you hard like a graduate student. You will learn things and do things you will never see in industry, and depending on the research field, you may make many people's lives better.
If your unmarried, welcome to the graduate student happy hunting ground. A "Proverbs 31" smart wife who can make money, plan, learn, teach her children well, and be loyal is a joy of life.
I have no regrets doing the one on one teaching, the outreach to local schools mentoring for Intel ISEF . God only knows the impact of the filtration, structural materials, and wound treatment teams I've been on. Not everyone gets to say they escorted three Noble Prize winners around campus, and had one take me to lunch. The Secretary of the Treasury I once escorted, , pulled me aside and said both he and I probably had better things to do then arrange the public meeting for his visit to our famed school of whatever.... I probably should have taken up the U.S. Marshal's and Secret Service offer of a move to DC for R&D. I probably should have taken the USAF up on a move to AF Research..
Here's the deal, unless you pull off getting a Masters, or use contacts you meet on the job to eventually move back to industry, you'll likely be trapped in Academia. Working for one or two well funded groups is fun. Being "promoted" to handle the needs of a whole "Department" or a "College" is not fun, but rather serious and highly political. At that point you gain unbelievable responsibilities, and might just wish you had been a PhD for the salary difference.
I have a resume that HR people can't understand. I go to interviews and corporate interviewers who have spent their entire lives working on one narrow topic have NO idea how I could have worked on as many instruments, technologies, and product development projects that I have on the resume.
Technician is not a great title for advancement. Once upon a time in the 50s,60s,70s, it was. Not now.
Spend a few years sucking up every thing you can, enjoy the limitless access to publications and technology. Being around young people keeps your mind sharp.
Get a few publications or a Patent or two.
Then Bail Out...
Because you may get downsized, the new Department Chair may not like you, or in my case, people did not have enough children 18 years ago and even the permanent funding dried up. One way or another, expect a minimum fifty hour week, and expect, if your any good, to not be able to walk down the hall without being flooded with more project requests..
Make sure your on "Hard" or "Permanent" funding, "Soft Money" is fun for a while, but I assure you there are dry spells of no funding.
If your going to a "Big Ten", Research I or Research II school, or a MIT, Harvard or Stanford, just go. I'd be weary of "State" and small private schools right now... Academic funding is abysmal right now, US Nationwide, and even perhaps world wide, unless the school has a good endowment.
Its fun, but don't stay too long.
If your school is not in Ohio, PM with your potential Profs names and I will pull you some papers to read if any of them have made it to open source. I'm not intending to move out of my home just yet. Hence the "Ohio". I would not answer where the job is in public. Hint "Scifinder Scholar"
Don't worry about what you will do. Unless your school is very, very, very well funded, you will do everything. Most, but not all Graduate students have not been in industry, and even fewer can even program or build basic things. Learn Glassblowing, Machining, Microscopy, of all kinds. Enjoy the Academic licenses of CAD, CAM, CAE etc.
Don't wait too long to reply. The technical job market is actually horrible right now, unless you are in IT, Biology or Medicine.
Signed, The Old, Unemployable, Ghost of Research Past... Who stayed too long.
One last warning, you have to know the Project better then the students. You have to think out of the box about how to teach them what YOU know.
If someone has offered you this position, be Honored, Academic Techs are actually far rarer then Rock Stars...
Steve (Formerly Senior Technician, Instrumentation )