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Ranxerox wrote: » Howzit, I am new to the forum, and I was just wondering how I can get into the IT field without experience, every job I see wants 1-2 years experience, but I can't get a job to gain experience, because I have no experience. It's a vicious circle and I have no idea how I can break it. I have a Networking Diploma from an independent college, so itsnot a recognised qualification, but I am interested in IT and I am studying for my CCENT and my MCITP. Any tips would be appreciated.
ipconfig.all wrote: » Im not in a good situation as well, though I have experience I still have under a year of experience. I get jealous when people without quals or experience gets jobs or when people who doesn't put much effort and gets jobs I try my best but still things have not worked out.
earweed wrote: » It can tend to get under your skin when people get jobs by who they know instead of what they know. Don't let it get you down.
earweed wrote: » Try what I am doing right now. I've got flyers (an idea I've got from a poster on TE) at local grocery stores and I've been doing PC repairs and fixes and I'm even getting to set up a small office network right now. Meanwhile I'm applying everywhere and putting my current experience on my resume. I've also taken a part-time contract job as a field engineer/tech doing warranty repair on HDTV's and an occasional computer (only 1 or 2 clients a week). The contract job I got by just having my A+ so it does help some. I'm doing this while working at Wal-Mart to pay the bills and attending WGU for a degree and getting certs. If you want to get into the field you're going to have to work hard to get in. If you go to church you may be able to volunteer to work with their computers are find another volunteer opportunity in the area. It can be done but it's not gonna be easy.
ipconfig.all wrote: » Thx Earweed. It is not necessary about what they know but it is also about being there at the right time and place. For an example I have being looking for a permanat job for nearly a year while my friend finished university like 2 months ago and got a job after like 3 or 4 months of looking.
Ranxerox wrote: » every job I see wants 1-2 years experience, but I can't get a job to gain experience, because I have no experience. It's a vicious circle and I have no idea how I can break it.
mikej412 wrote: » You apply anyway. Consider it the first test of your future job performance. If you have a large problem to solve -- do you give it all you've got and do what it takes to solve the problem? Or do you give up and walk away at the first obstacle with out even trying? A lot of people still find jobs through their contacts -- friends, family, former coworkers, classmates, etc. Have you let everyone you know that you're looking for a job? In the US a lot of jobs are available only through the temporary staffing agencies. A lot of large corporations post job openings internally before posting on their web site or releasing the job to their preferred staffing agency where the job could be offered "contract to hire." And a lot of the jobs that have been "lost" may only come back as "temporary jobs." So if you don't deal with the Temporary Staffing Agencies you may be missing out on a lot of jobs. Since there are a lot more people looking for jobs than there are available jobs, the staffing agencies don't have to advertise. You have to think long and hard about what you want to do -- and what you're willing to do to get that break. If you distribute resumes saying you want a Senior Network Engineer position, yet don't have any networking job experience, you've probably lost out on any consideration for a Junior Network Administrator or NOC monitoring position. In the US Small Business still creates the most jobs. And a lot of times when they have job openings they ask their existing employees if they "know someone" -- so if you don't already know someone who works there, you may miss out on a job opportunity unless you find them. That's where you may have go through your local phone books to find companies that could use your services themselves -- or sell services that include things you know how to do. In CiscoLand you can look on the Cisco web site and find local Business Partners in your area. You may have to do several searches and come up with different strategies for applying at the local office of "Mega-Partners," the large local Partners, and the small Partners. You might not have the high level knowledge and skills -- yet -- to do a lot of the things they provide for their customers, but you could drive a delivery truck and rack 'n stack the hardware. That get's your foot in the door and could give you a chance to grow into a different job and move up from there. It's actually possible that you may get more experience with more different equipment in 6 months than some people get in their entire career -- if you have what it takes to learn and keep up with the "new stuff." If you're in school -- or a recent graduate -- hopefully you were a good student and impressed an Instructor or two. Anyone can wander into the School Job Placement Office and find out the local McDonald's is hiring -- but if you made an impression on any of your Instructors they may be able to recommend you to one of their industry contacts. That's how I got my first job without any experience -- one of my Professors asked me if I'd be interested in a job programming on UNIX systems. If the extent of your job search is looking on the Internet (or local newspaper employment/job section) to see what few jobs have been posted that match your qualification 100% -- or posting your resume on a few job boards and waiting for companies to call you -- then you're missing out on the jobs with your local ISPs, phone companies, cable TV providers that people have walked in and asked for already. If someone else has walked through the local "Tech Center" or "Business Park" dropping off their resume at likely companies that could use their skills -- and found the opening before it ever got posted anywhere and got hired -- you'll never see it.
knwminus wrote: » MAN oh MAN. Rep for you because I totally agree. I almost thought I was going to go insane these last few months. I mean, there were jobs that I knew I could do but the recruiters told me they wouldn't submit me because of experience levels. I actually interviewed for a NOC job and they told me it came down to me and another person but the other person won out because they had their degree and a little more experience. If I didn't have enough experience, why did you interview me 3 times :roll Companies are greedy right now. They want it all and feel they deserve it all. What's worse is that they can probably get 80-90% of what they want simply because the job market is so bad. There is so much talent out there that they will just wait it out and get the person with the really good experience who just got laid off . It's bullshit.
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