Pupil wrote: » I don't see the point of obtaining Professional level certs (CCNP, MCSE, RHCE, etc.) when you are yet to be a professional.
thatguy67 wrote: » .... I just want to get a full-time job even if it's 25,000 a year. Being an employer's market it seems like anything less than perfection is trash, maybe it's my imagination but I feel like I have to go above and beyond to even stand a chance...
thatguy67 wrote: » I recently took a VoIP class at my community college and found it pretty interesting. My instructor recommended that I get certified in networking, an operating system and virtualization. I would like to have a specialization for the most part but I want to be broad enough for an entry-level job. I was thinking of pursuing the MCSA: 2012, VCP5-DCV and CCNA: Routing and Switching this year. Next year I would pursue the CCNA Voice early in the year, then get the MCSE: Communications track and possibly CCNP: Voice if no BS shows up in my life. I will also be taking a Linux course in the spring so maybe the RHCSA/RHCE. Possibly the Wireshark certification as well. Overall, by June if everything goes right I would have the following: CCNP:RS, CCNP:Voice, MCSE: Communication, RHCE, WCNA, and VCP5-DCV. Is that assortment of certs overkill for a student who hasn't gotten into the field yet? I would not expect some job title like "VoIP Engineer" starting out at 80 grand, but I want to get the testing/certification process out of the way while I have the time/effort/resources available. My college has a pretty nice Cisco lab with phones and a killer ESXi setup. The main motivation for me doing those tests is to gain confidence in my knowledge and know that I can do any task thrown at a junior-level sysadmin or network admin. I just want to get a full-time job even if it's 25,000 a year. Being an employer's market it seems like anything less than perfection is trash, maybe it's my imagination but I feel like I have to go above and beyond to even stand a chance. Would the certs work against me, or would prospective employers/hiring managers view the ambition in a positive light?
DoubleNNs wrote: » I think the CCNA and MCSA are actually entry level certs. And considering he already made progress on completing both, I see no reason to do any of the CompTIA trio, except the Sec+ and that's a maybe.
thatguy67 wrote: » or the Wireshark cert (though I can't confirm that the Wireshark cert is DoD-8570 compliant...the only source I can find is from Chappell's mouth on forums, no neutral site can seem to confirm it).
cyberguypr wrote: » Sorry tprice5, given that your link goes to the lmgtfy.com homepage I am forced to point you to this
DoubleNNs wrote: » I agree w/ everyone else that your goals are crazily out of touch of a realistic timeline. However, you "just barely failed" the CCNA Composite, have been studying MCSA for the last year, and are taking VMware classes. I'd say forget about any professional level certs and do what your teacher told you - 1 networking cert, 1 OS cert, 1 virtualization cert. Try to have those down in the next 12 months instead of the 50 character long alphabet soup you originally intended for. And the funny thing is, w/ a CCNA, MCSA:2012, VCP, and Degree, you'll be leagues ahead of just about everyone else hitting the job market and wouldn't even need those professional level certs. Trust me. You'd be worth a lot more than 25K, and your worth will simply increase as you gain experience and learn how to quickly/efficiently apply your book & lab knowledge. I think the most important, and possibly the hardest, task for you is to continue labbing and make sure you retain all the info you learned on the path to those certs. Make sure you fully understand all the material, submit it to long term memory, and feel comfortable talking in depth about each topic tested on those exams a year from now. You might find that harder than actually passing each exam - I know I do. Good luck. Keep us posted.