Titinho wrote: » I am in the middle of IT vocational school but they leave a lot of gaps, they just tell you the commands to make stuff run but don’t explain how anything works.So in my free time (which is a lot) I have been studying on my own and got my CCNA and wanted to continue on to the CCNP, but I have read that a CCNP with no work experience raises “red flags”.What are your opinions about this, I will still study the CCNP material but depending on the responses I might not take the examsPS: Sorry for any horrible misspell or any weird syntax, English is not my native language
NOC-Ninja wrote: » CCNA or CCNP without experience will bring red flags.
QHalo wrote: » Sorry but a CCNA with no experience is going to raise a red flag? You do realize that that is an entry level certification right? It would be fairly trivial to test a CCNA's knowledge in an interview to find out if they really understood the material. Now CCNP, eh I can agree with that to an extent. All of these certs are easily vetted quickly in an interview whether or not the candidate knows their stuff if the interviewer is asking the right questions.
NOC-Ninja wrote: » No, CCENT is entry level.CCENT - Career Certifications & Paths - Cisco Systems Cisco Certified Entry Networking Technician (CCENT) validates the ability to install, operate and troubleshoot a small enterprise branch network, including basic network security. Although, I get your point. I'm too lazy to prove my POV. back to studying.
Iristheangel wrote: » I would say to read through the material but not to actually take the tests until you're in a position where you will be applying your knowledge every day at work. The longer you go without using book knowledge like the CCNP, the more you will lose with skill fade. It happens to the best of us and you don't want to misrepresent yourself to an employer by listing a certification that you haven't used in months. Baby steps first. You have an entry-level certification (CCNA) so you should worry about getting an entry-level job first. After that, you can take the next steps to progress your career.
Iristheangel wrote: » @Michael - The first red flag I could think of is how someone could receive a professional-level certification without any experience at all. I've interviewed a few people in that situation and I've always gotten the "paper cert" impression. Certifications compliment experience but it does not replace experience. Having a CCNP is great after working in the field for awhile but touting professional-level credentials without any enterprise experience will fall short the second the applicant is put in a real life scenario where they have to think beyond the book. Also: skill fade. How are you really retaining that information from the exam you took x months ago if you arent using it every day?
jamesleecoleman wrote: » Going off topic: A IT vocational school that leaves a lot of gaps should raise a red flag all by its self. Do you have to go to this school?
QHalo wrote: » I knew you would go back to that. I've never seen a job post that mentioned CCENT. I don't see any threads on this board where people with no experience in networking say, "I'm shooting for CCENT". Some, including myself, got it simply because they chose to take the two exam approach to the CCNA. CCENT is also rather new, CCNA was the entry level cert and is really what people look at when they take the venture into Cisco networking. Did you get your CCENT before you got your first job? Sorry, but no one goes simply for CCENT. It's one half of the CCNA, why would someone only do half and then go looking for job?
sratakhin wrote: » Following your logic, a CCIE with no experience would be even better than a CCNP with no experience.
BroadcastStorm wrote: » Just make-up a fictitous company and have your BFF or GF act as the President of IT, problem solved
iyare wrote: » Would you guys rather he sat on his rear and did nothing? Man, go ahead and get that NP.
NOC-Ninja wrote: » No, CCENT is entry level.