Cisco TAC Engineer disgusted at the level of cheating in Exams

Hi everyone,
I've created a throwaway account because I want to protect my identify of my main account. I work in the Cisco TAC, I've worked here for now 24 months and I've become absolutely disillusioned at the number of my colleagues who are cheating on either the CCNA, CCNP or CCIE (Written & Lab). I thought that working at a vendor there would be some type of pride to the company and the brand, that cheating would be a dirty word. After I became friends with most of the people I work with I found that cheating is absolutely rife in the TAC culture. Not only is pirated INE content freely passed around, single accounts are used for many staff which breaks the terms of most training vendors contracts. Many of the staff internally are paying upwards or $3,000 for high quality dumped material. Training for the exam is literally a chore of rehearing the **** over and over until it becomes second nature.
Every time I mentioned to my colleagues I'm looking at progressing onto a new certification (legitimately), I'm bombarded with requests if I want a copy of their "dumped" content a request I always deny. I'm not sure if the issue is systemic or not, but most of the managers appear to be oblivious, some seem to be savvy to this as sometimes someone will rack up a few CCIEs from unrelated tracks in a short time and a comment will be made at the speed of their conquests. But for the most part the managers of the TAC Engineers appear complacent as one of their performance indicators as a team is to have more CCIEs on staff.
This is really disappointing to me and actually makes it harder to find the motivation to the pursue these certification or at the very least obtain them and move far away from Cisco. I'm disappointing at Cisco Learning for not catching a single one of these Engineers especially those who are able to knock out a few different tracks in quick succession.
FYI: There is a $10k bonus for each CCIE obtained
Does anyone have thoughts on this?
I've created a throwaway account because I want to protect my identify of my main account. I work in the Cisco TAC, I've worked here for now 24 months and I've become absolutely disillusioned at the number of my colleagues who are cheating on either the CCNA, CCNP or CCIE (Written & Lab). I thought that working at a vendor there would be some type of pride to the company and the brand, that cheating would be a dirty word. After I became friends with most of the people I work with I found that cheating is absolutely rife in the TAC culture. Not only is pirated INE content freely passed around, single accounts are used for many staff which breaks the terms of most training vendors contracts. Many of the staff internally are paying upwards or $3,000 for high quality dumped material. Training for the exam is literally a chore of rehearing the **** over and over until it becomes second nature.
Every time I mentioned to my colleagues I'm looking at progressing onto a new certification (legitimately), I'm bombarded with requests if I want a copy of their "dumped" content a request I always deny. I'm not sure if the issue is systemic or not, but most of the managers appear to be oblivious, some seem to be savvy to this as sometimes someone will rack up a few CCIEs from unrelated tracks in a short time and a comment will be made at the speed of their conquests. But for the most part the managers of the TAC Engineers appear complacent as one of their performance indicators as a team is to have more CCIEs on staff.
This is really disappointing to me and actually makes it harder to find the motivation to the pursue these certification or at the very least obtain them and move far away from Cisco. I'm disappointing at Cisco Learning for not catching a single one of these Engineers especially those who are able to knock out a few different tracks in quick succession.
FYI: There is a $10k bonus for each CCIE obtained
Does anyone have thoughts on this?
Comments
Cheating was rampant when I was in college several years ago. Some of the instructors not only ignored it but encouraged it. It was all around me in the Technology Department. There was one instructor in particular that used to leave the room during exams so everyone could ****.
They were loud too because of all the cheating, exchanging answers, various people looking through the book, others googling trying to find the answers. It was very difficult to test under these circumstances, and att first it drove me crazy!
Then I realized I was wasting time and energy by focusing on it. I changed my focus back onto what *I* was doing and what *I* wanted to achieve. I also got myself a pack of earplugs.
We had another instructor who showed the class where to get the answers to the exams. I saw no point in this as it would mean I was weak in my knowledge if I went there.
And on and on. Too many situations to list.
Long story short... most of the times I scored higher than all them cheating together, and that was because I studied and knew my material.
I got hired before I even graduated and you know where all of those guys (and girls) ended up after graduation? Some are working fast food, others I've seen in retail. I think out of them all the most successful one is the one I saw working in OfficeMax.
So the point to all of this is:
Concentrate on you.
Ignore what others are doing or not doing.
Keep the focus on you.
And remember, you will end up going much farther than all those people you see cheating right now because they end up knowing absolutely nothing in the end and that becomes very, very obvious during the interview process.
It sucks that they're pirating INE considering there's a corporate account they can be added to for free... Along with Safari Books, CBT, etc. But cheaters aren't smart, are they?
As far as the bonus for the CCIEs, that's only for the first two if they're FTEs. If they're red badges, they get nothing.
Sadly, I doubt it's just a problem specific to Cisco. Almost every company I've worked for had people who openly or subtley admit to **** or ask for them. That's where your responsibility comes in to report them. I've had ZERO shame about reporting internal Cisco folks who hit me up on social media or through Teams for **** or to break NDA or share copyrighted material and you really shouldn't either.
If you're looking for legit study partners or people inside Cisco that are studying for an IE but not dumping, I know plenty of them but I leave it up to you if you feel comfortable enough to reach out.
Blog: www.network-node.com
Great advice!
Blog: www.network-node.com
The CCIEs or cheating in general probably has little to do with your TAC cases. The reason being is (as the OP can probably back up) that TAC engineers are laser focused on a specific product or sometimes a feature of a product and typically can be very siloed. For example, there's not just an ASA team that covers ALL parts of the ASA. There's are separate teams to cover VPN, firewalling, hardware, IPS, etc and while they're on that team, they seldom stray to different technologies or functions. The training they go through is VERY different than any certification. It's typically a deep dive into that specific product or technology and goes down to the code, bugs, and ASICs. It's not the stuff you learn on certification and, if I must be honest, most of the time CCIEs don't do really do much to make or break a TAC engineer.
There are lines of support - such as tier 1, 2, backbone, etc and if they find a new bug or an issue they can't solve, it can escalate up to developers or the business unit itself. If you're not getting help in the time you want help, you have to ask to escalate it. You can keep it at a P1 or P2 and someone has to stay on the phone or ask for the duty manager. Not all TAC engineers are made equal but that's also because it depends on where you land and if you're escalating it if you're not with the person who can promptly find the answer. Also, if you're down to P3 or P4, the SLA to find a resolution typically is longer.
There's been some good AMAs on Reddit by TAC engineers. They're good reads.
Blog: www.network-node.com
Years ago I took a SourceFire training course, shortly after Cisco purchased them. We had a number of Cisco employees in the class, they were pretty vocal about passing around the USB stick with the answers to the cert exam.
Blog: www.network-node.com
Master of Science in Information Security and Assurance - Western Governors University
Bachelor of Science in Network Administration - Western Governors University
Associate of Applied Science x4 - Heald College
There are complaints from recent college grads in STEM that cannot find themselves a job after graduating and complain about the foreign hires. Wonder if it has to do with the cheating epidemic and failing the job interviews.
CISSP | CISM | CISA | CASP | SSCP | Sec+ | Net+ | A+
It's a culture.
There were several situations where I was the only one not cheating. When you don't **** along with them, they don't trust you and tend to think you're weird.
This causes you to never be accepted into the "group" and the fear of that alone causes a lot of students to go along with the cheating.
Also, I'm sure a lot of people under a certain age don't read anything they sign and also don't understand the seriousness of whatever they are signing, unfortunately.
It is what it is. There are all types of people in the world. You just have to go on with your day and keep the focus on yourself and your own decisions and goals.
Blog: www.network-node.com
Blog: www.network-node.com
2023 Cert Goals: SC-100, eCPTX
Blog: www.network-node.com
Blog: www.network-node.com
I know quite a few IT professionals who have been using d.u.m.p.s for years and they think it is a way of just validating what they already know based on their experience. Even though I disagree with it, a lot of peple think that way.
I actually believe everybody should be tested to a certain extent before they get hired or prove that they are going through continuous education / testing after hiring.
Studying for : TBD
Yeah, I have ZERO problem calling them out. I've done it so many times that the number of random PMs I get asking for **** over the years has drastically reduced. I guess my reputation proceeds itself now.
Blog: www.network-node.com
I couldn't agree more......
CISSP | CISM | CISA | CASP | SSCP | Sec+ | Net+ | A+
Oh... And it didn't stop there while working as a tech lead I had to manage several techs and few of them had Comptia d.u.m.p.s.... I was thinking if you are going to d.u.m.p might as well be the server technology they were working on.
Seriously guys/gals supporting RedHat and Windows servers were dumping CompTia's. Just bizarre......