Compare cert salaries and plan your next career move
bermovick wrote: » My first job was in St Louis, working midnight shift at a NOC (7pm-7am). Did it suck? Yes. Did it give me experience working on equipment outside of my labs and 2 years' experience working in networking for my resume? You bet.
pinkydapimp wrote: » I mean i think the reality is, when entry level roles are saturated, you have to differentiate yourselves. Dont get an associates, get a bachelors. If anyone can get into a role getting an associates and one cert, guess what, it will become saturated and pays will go down and they will start asking for more credentials because they can. Maybe grab a comp sci bachelors this way you have alot of other options if you run into this and this will differentiate you against your competition. Maybe look on the vendor side for roles instead of traditional networking roles. Get a job at a company installing routers or networking SANs or NAS devices. And hey, if its is still saturated with folks that have all the certs a BS in Comp sci and you still cant get a job, look in another area and gather some other experience in the meantime. IT is a huge field. Its not just Networking or sysadmin. i think many times people think they have to go in those directions and as a result they end up in the most saturated areas of IT. And then when they are also told they can get in without a degree(because they know other folks that did) they are setting themselves up for failure.
ecuadra wrote: » To top things off help desk roles pay very little and or they make you work on call hours or 2nd/3rd shift schedules especially for NOC positions to start.
Iristheangel wrote: » For you, it might be an issue with geography and the types of jobs you're going for.
networker050184 wrote: » Yep, got to go where the jobs are.
Iristheangel wrote: » I think the whole "saturated" thing is completely based on geography here.
Phileeeeeeep651 wrote: » It's true, the days of "You have a CCNA and a pulse? You're hired and heres 100k" are mostly gone... apparently not in California though
Iristheangel wrote: » I should clarify that said person has more than a pulse and at least some experience even if it was limited Military background and one previous network job. Plus she showed an exceptional drive to learn which is why she was brought on at such a high rate.
Iristheangel wrote: That being said, the "CCNA-level and a pulse" is actually pretty hard to find. You'd be amazed how many people are interviewed with fresh CCNAs and yet they can't explain CCNA-concepts. Sadly, dumping at that level is so wide-spread that it's a struggle to find someone who's a legit CCNA even in an area as densely populated as Los Angeles.
Phileeeeeeep651 wrote: » Are you serious? How do these people think they can get a job with just dumping the material? If they get to a technical interview, what the hell is their plan now? I'd really love to get inside the mind of a cert dumper and see what their process and reasoning behind it all is. Seems to me if you're going to spend the time memorizing exam questions you could just as easily learn the exam material and pass the test, that might just be me though, or most of us on this forum. Also, I apparently need to include LA in my potential moving destinations!
Compare salaries for top cybersecurity certifications. Free download for TechExams community.