Tongy wrote: » The honest answer is that SSCP occupies something of a certification no mans land. 125 questions (half CISSP) 3 hours (half CISSP) but requires only 1 of Infosec experience? Seems like a lot of hoops to jump through for something that is pretty difficult to attain, costs less and is less recognised than Sec+ That said, I see value in both, but am prouder of the SSCP designation than Sec+ - and saw it as a stepping stone certification to CISSP (eventually). I see value in it and if/when I hire people, will see having it as a good thing for the candidate.
Remedymp wrote: » The problem isn't the certification per se, it's the organization. ISC is almost a non-existent organization outside of the CISSP. It's just not relevant in comparison to San's and GIAC certs or ISACA and CISA/CRISC. The latter two are constantly evolving and widely available per region as they have regional chapters. ISC just does not have that presence. So, therefore, they lose any relevance and the non-cissp cert won't mean much. Security+ has relevance because Comptia is on the front line working with companies to constantly evolve it. This is how the CASP certification came to be.
matai wrote: » I got it last year a couple weeks after the Security+.My thought was that since my employer was paying for it, why not?