Hello guys,
I am starting with my CCIE studies this week and I have up until this point been focusing on how I best can study the information and at the same time be time/cost effective.
Please have a look at my approach and let me know if there is something you would change and why.
I have used INEs advice on taking on a structured approach:
1. Basic theoretical knowledge
2. Basic hands on knowledge
3. Expert theoretical knowledge
4. Expert hands on knowledge.
This is what im thinking:
I am going to try to hit a minimum of 4 hours per day of reading in the first phase, then add 2 hours to that when its time for watching videos, so 6h/day on phase 2.
I feel that Phase 3 & 4 is too far down the road atm to estimate how much time per day i will have to do, plus I need to reassess my current life situation by then.
--- Phase 1: Build basic knowledge, foundations (reading only) ~ 5 months
1.1 Read the vendor independent book on this list
Recommended CCIE Books | INE - INE
1.2 Read the Cisco Press books on this list
Recommended CCIE Books | INE - INE--- Phase 2: Build advanced theoretical knowledge + Build basic hands on knowledge (reading + videos + some labs) ~ 6 - 10 months
2.1 Buy INE All Access Pass and watch all of the R&S materials
2.2 Buy rack rentals from INE, watch the videos again and fallow along with labs
2.3 Read Cisco documentations + whitepapers + RFCs
2.4 Pass Written exam
--- Phase 3: Apply expert level theoretical knowledge and basic level hands on knowledge to reach expert level hands-on knowledge (labbing) ~ 6 months
3.1 All out labs. Doing workbooks and if necessary, fall back to reading/videos when a gap in knowledge exists.
3.2 Take time off from work (if possible) to do labs all days.
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Please let me know what you think of this approach and if there is anything you would change Id love to hear your opinion.
One thing that I realize is not exactly 100% time effective is that i will spend all of phase 1 just reading.
INE does however strongly recommend having a good solid understanding of foundational knowlede before approaching their course, which is intended to help you pass the lab, not the written... so maybe I should buy the All Access Pass sooner than Phase 2 and start watching their vids as I learn the foundations? It does break the rule of building basic knowledge first though...