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KGhaleon wrote: » You have an MCSE, but no experience? or do you mean you are studying for it? An MCSE should prove that you are capable and knowledgeable enough to manage a windows infrastructure. You don't really need years of experience for those type of entry-level jobs. Pay it no mind, as they will take you regardless if you know your stuff. Experience wouldn't hurt though and would help you against your competition(your major problem). What do you teach? If you teach anything IT-related, then that should be considered experience.
sambuca69 wrote: » I was looking around on Dice earlier and saw a 'Junior Network Engineer' position that required a CCIE, and some other wacky requirements. o.O I'll post it later when I get home....
skrpune wrote: » correct me if I'm wrong Hager, but it sounds like you don't current have any certifications yet? Any applicable IT experience? What do you do as the tech leadership coach? I think there's a lot of misunderstanding of what "entry level" means in terms of the IT industry. It generally means 1-2 years of applicable experience/knowledge and/or a bachelors degree (or an associates for some positions). Most often you have to pay your dues in IT (and in other fields) with not-so-glamorous or lower paying jobs in order to get someone to even set foot on their ladder if you don't have experience or certs or education (or some combination thereof). There are some positions which are listed as "entry level" which truly are meant for folks with little to no experience, but they will pay a lot less and/or involve some sort of downside (call center, night shift, etc.) Imagine someone who's getting into plumbing or electrical trade, or mechanics or other similar hands-on fields. Do you know how LITTLE those guys/gals get paid at first? It takes some experience and some time for them to prove that they can handle things on their own & earn a higher paycheck & lose the on-the-job "babysitters" watching over them or training them. I'm not saying you need babysitting, I'm just telling it like it is from an employer'$ per$pective. Anyone who doesn't already have some sort of knowledge or experience is a cost risk and a risk to their customer base and will take money out of their pockets either with additional supervision needed or possible mistakes/lost customers. You may be able to get some jobs that pay in the $36K range, depending on when/where you want to work and where you live. I was offered a job in that pay range ($16/hr CAD in 2007) with just an A+ cert...but it was working night shift (with *possibility* of maybe later transferring to a daytime shift) doing call-center support for crackberries. Ugh. Instead I took a job paying $10/hr working for small home-based tech shop. I didn't make tons of money, but I liked what I did a LOT more and I learned a ton, and now I have a year's experience as a tech (building, repairing, troubleshooting, installing, etc.) under my belt. If you're willing to give up a little something (either a nice daytime shift or super-great pay in the short term) then you can have a much easier time of getting that first IT job. But if you want to be in that pretty good pay range & have daytime hours, then you will have to look a little harder...but don't let that stop you. It's a tough economy, but keep at it, and the right job will find you in time.
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