By dead, I do not mean that the exams have been retired by MS, although some of the more popular electives (like Exchange 2003)
are being retired soon. I mean dead as in if you don’t have it by now, don’t bother.
But XP/2003 are still widely used
Yes, and there are plenty of people who can support it. If you have any experience at all, you can support it as well, so let your resume demonstrate that. Companies will be moving to 7/2008 and will need people that understand the new OS. If you already have skills and experience with 7/2008, the company won’t have to train you after they hire you and that will make you stand out against the other applicants.
The last couple of large, national Win7 migrations I have scoped required some sub-contractors to fill in some staffing gaps. We can find very few contractors with general Win7 skills, and none with specific deployment skills. Meanwhile we have people with XP skills and certs lined up around the block looking for work.
Recent Gartner research predicts that most organizations will migrate to Win7 in 2011 and 2012, but that demand for skilled people will outstrip supply. If you want to guarantee work for the next couple of years, look at the 680, 681, and 686 exams.
Company X is still on XP/2003 and has no plans to upgrade
Do you really want to work for a company that will not invest in its infrastructure? What happens when the Exchange server is at capacity or the SAN needs upgraded? If they won’t invest in the pieces that run their business, what makes you think they will invest in their people? Company X will try to run on the old platforms until third-party vendors pull support or an auditor busts them for running unsupported software, and then have to upgrade in a panic. You’re better off working for a company that invests in itself and can plan for its own future.
MCSE still has brand recognition over MCITP
Yes, but not as much as before. The last couple of company recruiters that called me only listed MCITP in the requirements. MS Partner requirements only include the latest MCITPs and MCTS certifications.
I can upgrade my MCSx to MCITP: X
True, but that’s an expensive upgrade. Assuming you took 680 as either your MCSE client or elective, you would need to take 2 more tests to upgrade to the MCITP: EA, for a total of 9 exams at $125 each to get both the MCSE and MCITP: EA. You could earn the MCITP: EA from scratch with only 5 exams. Is it worth $500 in exam fees, plus training material, plus study time to get both? That time and money would be better spent by broadening your skillset with a CCNA or by specializing in another MS technology like Exchange/SQL/Virtualization.
But I want to be an MCSE because the title means something to me
Then get busy. If you want the title to validate your years of experience with the products and you just need a few weeks to get into exam shape, then go for it. Then you too can always call yourself an MCSE just like the 200,000 NT4 MCSEs that never upgraded their certs but kept their titles.
A year ago my opinion was different, but XP is 9 years old and server 2003 will be 8 soon. If you are just starting your career, skip the MCSx and move on to the MCITP.
Live in the now.