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Netstudent wrote: I plan to use it as a tool for career advancement. Open up some doors, get some solid experience, and aquire more knowledge.
mikearama wrote: Amen to that. And as an aside, up my value to the company... read: MAKE MORE BLING BLING!
MQuinn6 wrote: Thanks for the responses, Netstudent & mikearama. More specifically, what career path are you/do you plan to be on?
mgeorge27 wrote: CCNP is a CCIE stepping stone... oooohhh yeahhh!!! beat that! (laughs)
mikej412 wrote: mgeorge27 wrote: CCNP is a CCIE stepping stone... oooohhh yeahhh!!! beat that! (laughs) I'll +1 the stepping stone.... And raise you: if I give the guy/gal at the Starbucks drive thru window my CCNP Cisco Career Certifications Wallet Card (and the Starbucks giftcard I got on my birthday a couple years back) they give me a Free Cup of Coffee!
networker050184 wrote: You don't have to do a call center, but you are not going to be an engineer without experience. Experience is a lot more important than certification. If you put together a good resume and good interviewing skills you could pick up a low level network position somewhere. If you read the link I posted there is some good advice. You may have to move sideways into networking from helpdesk or some other entry level position. With out experience you only qualify for positions that do not require experience. If the job wants 3 - 5 years experience (which most pure networking positions do) you will have a hard time beating out experienced people for the position. Weather you have a CCNP or CCNA or whatever Cisco certification, without experience you will have to start at the bottom.
Steve10393 wrote: A close friend of mine is the person who turned me onto the track of the cisco certs, whom works at cisco as a sales engineer here in the Raleigh/Durham area. His advice from the beginning was to finish the CCNP before applying for a job because CCNA would not land me anything that I would be happy with, coming in with no real job experience.
Steve10393 wrote: I do/have done most of what your describe resume wise Mike, and my navy job did involve managing the ships pc lan, but it's still very weak compared to commercial networks. So, from what you guys have said, to get a job with a cisco partner or something like that in pre-sales would be the lucky and high-end possibility and the worse case scenario would be a help desk or NOC job? If I do end up with an entry level, which seems more likely, what do you assume the pay/salary range might be? How long do you think I would have to remain in that type of job before I could branch out more and get an network engineering job that would use the CCNP? If taking an entry level job, would the CCNP help with my pay/salary? I have been a computer geek of sorts since I was like 13 or 14, running a BBS system(that should bring back cringes, the bbs software was remote access iirc) and building my own pc's since back then, and I'm in my late 20s now, single, nothing but time on my hands. Thing is, when/if I'm in the right environment for it, and surrounded by the equipment I can pick a lot up very quickly. My main concern is getting in the right environment where I am not going to be slowed down, if that makes sense. Just because it may take most people a year to get comfortable with some sort of tech or system doesn't mean anything. Most people are lazy as far as learning new things while they work a full time job, etc... And I realize not all companies encourage/care if someone wants to move up quickly, not to mention for some it might even be a problem if you do. Know it's a lot of questions, I appreciate any advice you guys can give. Oh, and this is RTP, raleigh/durham area, that I expect to be job hunting in.
Steve10393 wrote: I do/have done most of what your describe resume wise Mike, and my navy job did involve managing the ships pc lan, but it's still very weak compared to commercial networks.
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