Compare cert salaries and plan your next career move
jemison wrote: » I too was a 25 series soldier 25L (cable dawg), from DEC 2000 to SEP 2008. I think you should pursue certs and degree. I personally am studying for my CCNA. I am currently in the IZ as a contractor working as a cable tech. Continue your professional development, there will always be work. Welcome to the community, and thank you for your service.
brad- wrote: » I wouldnt bother with the AAS. Your experience says more. Instead of the AAS, I would consider doing 1 of 2 things. 1 - If you can give your time to a degree, do it. Use your GI Bill to the fullest, dont waste it on an AAS (my opinion). The certs will ALWAYS be there when you get ready...but your window of opportunity to complete a BS is more narrow, particularly if you want a family, or find yourself in a situation where you have to go to work full time. 2 - If you cant, find a course (not an AAS, just a technical course) and specialize in something that interests you. Networking (CCNA), database admin, development/programming...there are plenty of certs to work towards and you can get your resume competitive in about 6 months of hard work. I used my GI Bill to get my degree, and I would advise anyone that can do the same to do so.
kasel23 wrote: » Wow man, small world. Are you up at Union III? Thanks for your input on this.
tpatt100 wrote: » I was a 31F am in a 25N slot in the Guard. I am currently spending the next three months at Ft Riley, KS getting certified officially as a 25N. Been working in IT for a while now. I would imo pursue some certs and get a job in the field NOW and go to school at night. Reason being your clearance is active. I would recommend going Signal in the Guard to keep your clearance active but most of my unit is in Afghanistan and I doubt you want to get out and end up back in the Middle East...... But Signal now a days blurs the lines in IT and ambitious soldiers can easily make the transition to IT in the civilian world.
SephStorm wrote: » Another 25 series here, 25B in training at Ft G. I concur with the previous statements, choose a path and charge down it. I got out of my first enlistment with three certs, personal experience, and in the end, no IT job As much as I hate to admit it, unless you have a. a inside contact, b. a lots of experience in the area you are applying for, and/or c. a really good job market where you are at, you could have some trouble. My suggestions, 1. use what time you have left studying and preparing for CLEP/DANTES exams. It sounds like knocking out a few General Ed classes won't be to difficult for you. 2. Start looking for an educational program with a 4 year degree. A popular one here is WGU see this thread.http://www.techexams.net/forums/jobs-degrees/30564-western-governors-university.html 3. Start working on your resume NOW! Get on LinkedIn and start networking, between the TechExams group and the Army groups, you should have a good foundation, for making connections. 4. Look for government jobs. Several military units have/are/will open this unit in the cyber arena and i'm sure that they will civilians. 5.You can also look at the reserves as a supplement to your income, and a opportunity to get more training and leadership experience. Good luck. Remember me when you make it big.
Mrock4 wrote: » I have very rarely met a soldier with a high GT score who didn't want to tell everyone about it. The GT score is a combination of math and reading comp- nothing else. So, if you're great at reading, average at math, you up with an average GT score. Doesn't mean someone is more or less qualified to work in IT. Infact, it's not even a good measure of anything other than math skills, IMO..most people do well on the reading section.
Mrock4 wrote: » Wow, small world..lots of 25 series here. I'm an active 25B. SephStorm, where are you at in FL? Are you active/guard? I'm at Macdill.
kasel23 wrote: » I've considered Guard/Reserve, but like you said, getting picked up (and with my luck I will) to do yet another deployment would kill it for me. If I did that I feel like I might as well go over as a civilian for 2-3 years, make a stash of bank, and go from there. My thing about working immediately, considering the Post 9/11 GI bill, you only get the full BAH amount if you are a full-time student. Do you still think it would be most beneficial to be working full time and doing school on the side? Just don't want to sell myself short and potentially follow a lower-end career when having a higher education would have allowed me to potentially be more successful. But, I suppose that as long as I do eventually get the schooling done either path has the same end result.
SephStorm wrote: » I'm active currently in Ft. Gordon. No idea of future duty stations. How did you get to MacDill? You in the reserves?
kasel23 wrote: » The GT score comment felt like a bit of a sucker punch, but I can see where you're coming from.
Mrock4 wrote: » Nice..Ft. Gordon..AKA TRADOC Hell, haha. I'm supposed to go to BNOC there in August..I might see you. I'm not looking forward to being back there. I reclassed, so I got a good taste of gordon for about 7 months. Got another buddy there right now, though he's deployed at the moment. I got to macdill on as a nominative assignment. I contacted a lady at the secretary of the army, and she got me nominated for a special assignment, and it ended me up here. I'm active duty. Definitely a lucky assignment. Before here I was in Hawaii for 2 yrs, although I spent 1 1/2 of those years in Iraq..so I can only say I saw hawaii for 6 months, unfortunately. Either way, for most active duty Army, Macdill is a dream assignment. For those of you who hate your current assignment, you're the one in control, believe it or not. I couldn't stand my old unit, and it only took one e-mail to the right person to change it all. I PCS'd a year early from my old station, to the dismay of my old unit.
SephStorm wrote: » As far as branch managers go, I hear its near impossible to even get in contact with them. I emailed mine a few weeks ago, haven't heard anything.
Dr_Atomic wrote: » First of all, the employment options in the civilian world right now are bleak. Why don't you consider staying in the Army and applying for officer school? That way, you could go after a computer science/programming degree of some sort, which would make you much more employable than some certification. The Army would pay for it, and you'd make a lot more as an officer than enlisted. AND - you wouldn't have to worry about losing your job to outsourcing like the rest of us. Second, a Security+ or Network+ cert are bottom-of-the-barrel certs, and few employers put much stock in them, much less request them as a requirement for a job. Networking will require certs like what Cisco or Juniper offer, for example. If you want to work with servers and PCs, you may want to consider Microsoft certs like an MCSE, or some kind of security cert like a CISSP. There are tons of people with the above-mentioned certs floating around in the job market. Another option is to get trained (if you aren't already) in a different kind of technology, which is in demand and that an entity like the Army would train in. Something like satellite technology, or laying fiber cable, etc (you would know more than I). Something not easily learned in the non-military world. Best wishes to you.
Compare salaries for top cybersecurity certifications. Free download for TechExams community.