nel wrote: » After reading gorebrush's post recently i have a few questions of my own. At the moment i have the NA. Currently i am still at uni PT and have one year to go to finish my BSC Hons degree. At the moment im studying for the BCMSN on a secondary level too. Obviously, my main target is to finish my degree with a decent grading. However i also hope to have done at least 50% of the NP track by the time i finish my degree. As my degree is coming to an end i have begun seriously thinking of my future. Eventually i would like a high end network Architect role. Someone who not only designs systems but also has a strong implementation focus too (i like hands on more). So at the moment i was thinking of the R&S track primarily and eventually backing it up with the design track, voice and/or security. (long term of course). Now it terms of certification how would you's go? i know it depends on the person etc so i'll give some background info shortly. Would you go NP and straight to IE R&S or possibly something like NP > DA > DP > NA:Voice>VP>IE R&S? now for the background..I am currently 23 years young! working in IT for nearly 7 years. Worked my way up from and apprentice > desktop support L2 > Sys admin > network engineer. Currently i work with cisco switching primarily and handle routing etc secondary. However all of our WAN links are moving to a managed service so i will not get to touch these in the future which is hugely dissapointing for me. I have been working in a networking role for 6 months now so im still learning alot but by the time i finish my degree / NP i should have approx 1 1/1 to 2 years experiance. This is when i will most likely decide which track to take (IE or something else). I really would love to go and topple (i hope!) the IE R&S at that time but i am worried it will go against me due to my years of experiance etc. So im unsure to build up other tracks initially then go for the IE? Also to do what i want would it be best to work in a fully focused network role where you get to work with a wider range of network area's as i feel my current job will limit me in this, however it is a good place to start. I feel eventually i will have to relocate (again) to find the next step up i require anyway. What do you guys think? i would just like to draw from your experiances and thoughts really. Although i know alot can happen in the time it will take before i get to this point.
CCIEWANNABE wrote: » well, good luck with whatever route you plan on pursuing. you are pretty young and you seem like you have the motivation, and with those two i'm sure you'll go pretty far with your career!
Turgon wrote: » The CCIE is a huge requirement in terms of personal time. On that basis I would encourage people to take it on before they get too entrenched in family life and professional commitments. Regarding on the job training the more exposure you get to networking in your present role the better but if it's limited that doesn't necessarily have to hamper your CCIE preparations. Real world cisco experience certainly will help you put the studies into context as well as improve the CCIE learning experience though. A lot of people hash an incremental program of certs to get to CCIE and this can be useful but it can also sometimes be counter productive if you postpone the CCIE 'launch' too long. Professional certs are helpful but the IE is a great leap forwards from that level and the workrate required to attain it is severe, so don't put it off too long. CCNA/CCNP would be a decent foundation for the CCIE in R&S.
jrs91 wrote: » Theoretical question, but what would you think of someone that passed CCIE and had far less than cisco's recommendations for attempting the labs (3-5 years)? I'm going to be in that position. I'm studying CCNP as soon as I finish my bachelors in an unrelated field, and as soon as I am done CCNP i'm moving on to CCIE, possibly with a CCDP or CCSP in between (haven't decided yet). I have 4 years of full-time IT experience, but I would call that real experience where I was the main guy, and not some lame helpdesk job. I went from programming, to programming+sysadmin, to running the small IT department for my company, which is basically the same job but with added responsability of having a couple people under me and the budget. I've never been idle at my job and have actually accomplished a lot and have blown my employers' expectations away, but it's not a cisco-centric job (I'll be looking for one of those as soon as I have the CCNP) and it's not what I want to be doing long-term. I'm getting out this summer.
jrs91 wrote: » Thanks for the detailed and helpful response, Turgon. I hate to say it, but I am the 80-90/hr a week workaholic type. :P With undergrad (which I didn't finish when I was younger) and 50-60 hrs a week at the office, that's what it essentially works out to. I have been doing this for the past 2 years. Once university is out of the way in a month and a half I can really get in to the cisco stuff full-time @ 30-40hrs/wk. I'm really itching to get started and I really don't care about social life until the CCIE is done (at which point i'll work on the next milestone but probably at a slower pace). I'm fortunate to be single and without kids, so lifestyle management isn't an issue for me in the way it is for you. I'm in my late 20s and wasted time when I was younger (ex-eq player, so I stay the hell away from MMOs now), and I feel like I need to make up for it by being super-focused on work and my own development now. Thankfully I'm like a sponge and I learn everything very quickly. With this horrible economy, the only thing I'm still debating is whether to take an extended vacation or not. Back when economists were talking about a Q3 recovery, or at least flat growth, I was planning an 8 month trip that would be a mix of fun and 50-60hrs/wk of cisco. At that rate I figured I could really fly through the material, and do it in an exotic location while having some fun and visiting a few countries. At this point I'm worried about how long I would be out of work when I got back, even if I got all of the above-mentioned certs during my vacation. My current thinking is that I might just get the CCNP and look for a job right away. You're also pushing me in the direction of not taking a long vacation and instead staying put and doing cisco for 80-90hrs/wk when I quit my job. By July, I will have enough in cash to not work and maintain my standard of living for over a year. If I went hardcore on the cisco I could accomplish a lot, and maybe even pass the CCIE, and then I could take a CCNP level job for a couple of years, work like hell getting as much experience as possible, continue to develop my skills, and then finally look for a CCIE-level job. Hopefully employers will look favorably upon my zeal and proven performance at my last job, despite my limited real-world cisco experience to date. Good tip regarding the cisco partner thing. I hadn't thought of that. I guess I'll make the cal l in July when I give notice at my current job, and after I've had a taste of the CCNP-level stuff. I don't really foresee myself having difficulty with it though. Thanks again!
Turgon wrote: » I would say that if you really can take the financial hit then plan to finish what you are doing in July and then give yourself a three month window to do the following.. 1. Hunt down the *right* job that will give you useful exposure to Cisco while at the same time leave you with enough petrol to study properly evenings and weekends and ideally on workstime to some extent. Trust me, it may take three months to find a job that ticks enough of those boxes. 2. During the three months work your ass off on Cisco prep. Read a lot of books from the recommended reading list for the CCIE. Buy the technology labs from a vendor and spend three months doing them. Providing you work really hard this will jumpstart your CCIE progress. It will also give you a metric of how well you are handling things and importantly how well fulltime study sits with you. Just don't expect to pass the thing inside three months unless you have a great deal of experience as well as a ferocious work ethic 24/7. Try out the written exam at the end of the three month period. If you study very hard indeed you have a shot at that if you are off work during the whole period. Then get back to paid employment and study as you can.
chmod wrote: » If you could get a job for a cisco partner and then wait 1 or 2 years to gain experience as a consultant ant then start your CCIE track.
Turgon wrote: » Working for a partner could be ideal yes. I think you should have the CCIE before you call yourself a consultant though, but that's just me