Phileeeeeeep651 wrote: » Just took the exam and passed it today. I used Boson, CBTNuggets and the OCG. CBT + OCG was a good combo IMO. CBT was better for understanding how to actually do a lot of the topics and the OCG was good for the more technical/vocab parts. I felt like Boson was helpful but not as helpful as it was for my CCNA. It took me two tries to pass, got a 838 the first try and then a 901 the second. The one section that I would say was lacking the most out of all the material was Content and Endpoint Security, I had to find additional resources to get a better grasp on that topic. Also, like robo78 said, the CBT material reaches pretty deep into the CCNP topics and I think that definitely helped with the exam. Hope this helps!
ande0255 wrote: » I would also advise to look at the blueprint on Cisco's website, and look at what technologies are weighed more or less, so you have an idea of where you can afford to lose some points while still passing the exam if you can't fully retain everything (like most of us can't) Hope that helps, I just did that with the CCNP R/S yesterday to see where I can shave off some study time to dedicate to higher weighted subjects!
NightBlade09 wrote: » I'm beginning to think in my position, this cert would do nothing for me, for what the risk is to pass this thing. The poor study material, basically relying on Boson is ridiculous. I don't think it's worth the $300 for such a high chance of failure. Learning my job would do me a lot better justice.
NightBlade09 wrote: » I'm beginning to think in my position, this cert would do nothing for me, for what the risk is to pass this thing. The poor study material, basically relying on Boson is ridiculous. I don't think it's worth the $300 for such a high chance of failure.
NightBlade09 wrote: » Learning my job would do me a lot better justice.
JoJoCal19 wrote: » I came to the same conclusion, that it just wasn't worth my time, effort and money due to the crappy preparation situation and the fact that it wouldn't do anything for me in my current job. I had been wanting to pursue it (after CCENT) because I like Cisco Security stuff and I had thought about moving in that direction, but with the aforementioned reasons I decided not to.
NetworkNewb wrote: » The Cisco training course on this is really good if you can swing the cost or have an employer pay for it.
mnashe wrote: » What is your actual job? Do you plan to just let your CCNA R&S lapse?
NightBlade09 wrote: » I'm going to let my own mind and interest lead me to what I need and want to know. To self study... and away from certifications.
PCTechLinc wrote: » I find your lack of interest in pursuing certifications unfortunate IMO, but I very much appreciate your continuing with self-study. Pursuit of knowledge doesn't HAVE to include degrees or certifications, and if you're happy where you are and you don't require either, all the more power to you. I can say that I know plenty of people that have let their certifications lapse, and ultimately regretted their decision. Regardless, just keep learning!
NightBlade09 wrote: » Yeah, self study of the latest Cisco Security technologies and messing around with them in a lab would probably itch your interest in them. You could move from there if you wanted to.
NightBlade09 wrote: » So yeah, I'm letting it lapse. My motivation for this, is knowing all the great techs out there with no certifications at all. For example, I've seen Cisco Fellow's without them. To get a CCIE one day, maybe, very maybe. It would have to be if I was really bored, and conquered my job. I don't envision this though. I'm going to let my own mind and interest lead me to what I need and want to know. To self study... and away from certifications.