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earweed wrote: » First off if you can afford it (or when) you need to quit the 2 job thing. It's gonna start affecting your personal life and you may burn out. You're young and think you're invincible but it will eventually get to you.
earweed wrote: » As far as the certs go, once you are down to working one job the decisions will be easier. Keep with your formula of doing the ones required for school and the ones with the best potential ROI in the future.
rogue2shadow wrote: » Congrats on the progress as always . I would say go Sec+, CCNP, then jump to CCSP when they change the material (I hear its relevant but a bit dated). You could also just go CCSP directly as the CCNA:S is the primer for it. I see tons of ads around here for CCNP cert holder (CCSP, VP, NP, IP etc.) and the starting salaries are close to $75000 a yr. I guess only certify in things that will either have return on investment or will make you Network engineer x (1,2,3 etc). As you know I'm starting out as well so this is just my 2 cents lol.
ColbyG wrote: » Go for the NP. If you want to be a network engineer, it will be the most beneficial to you.
earweed wrote: » First off if you can afford it (or when) you need to quit the 2 job thing. It's gonna start affecting your personal life and you may burn out. You're young and think you're invincible but it will eventually get to you. As far as the certs go, once you are down to working one job the decisions will be easier. Keep with your formula of doing the ones required for school and the ones with the best potential ROI in the future.
ColbyG wrote: » Everyone should get the NP before moving to specializations, IMO. It gives you the base to excel in the other specialties.
veritas_libertas wrote: » I have to agree. I was working three jobs, and college at the same time. It will burn you out quickly.
networker050184 wrote: » Go CCSP if you want to do security and Cisco. Seems like a perfect match to me.
knwminus wrote: » The thing is, I don't support not 1 ASA anywhere. I've only seen one twice and honestly everyone I know who has supported them hates. Plus they are expensive as hell. 2 ASAs would cost more than all of the Sonicwall gear we just purchased combined. CCSP would be cool but I need to find a shop that actually uses them.
knwminus wrote: » Ok so as many of you know, I am working 2 jobs right now. I am probably going to end my moonlight gig at the end of this month or the beginning of next month. Well I got a call from a place yesterday about doing some cisco work for them. Being a part time network engineer. Now I don't know if I am going to take it, or if they want to make me an offer yet but this had me thinking about my next few certs. I am almost done with S+ and I have to do LPIC for school but I am trying to decide if I should do CCNP. I would like to get into more security and Linux but the way I see it, CCNP would increase my earning potential more than LPIC-2 or C|EH. RHCE would increase my earning potential but I don't support any RH servers so it might not be the best to do right now. Then there is this elearnSecurity sexiness. I mean eventually I'd like to do all of them and I have a formula for deciding worth of certs but these types of things throw monkey wrenches into my plans lol. What do you all think?
knwminus wrote: » I didn't mean Network Security from the Cisco perspective.
ColbyG wrote: » I didn't either. If you want to do any specializations in the networking field, the CCNP is a great thing to get/have.
nicklauscombs wrote: » is this on top of your other two jobs?
knwminus wrote: » I am going to leave my part time job at the end of the month. So I will be down to "just" one.
knwminus wrote: » I am almost done with S+
knwminus wrote: » On the one hand, this could be a very good job to get some more CSCO networking experience. On the other hand, I am damn tired of working two jobs and even working one where it is just remote will still make me feel like I'm committing adultery. Plus I need to get school done. IDK we will see.
earweed wrote: » Seems like just yesterday you were trying to find a job period. How times have changed..lol
rogue2shadow wrote: » I hear ya. I guess what it comes down to is how long you plan on keeping the two job schedule, when you think you'll enter the fulltime Network Security Engineer III role at your main job, and when or if you feel the bachelor's wall will hit you sooner than later. At $30 an hour, its a hard decision; thats pretty good money.
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