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Iristheangel wrote: » No, We've been pretty clear. Find a job to utilize the CCNA knowledge first and then go after the NP after the CCNA material is solidified from daily use.
waragi wrote: » Anybody able to pass the ccie practical lab exam with no experience has to be somebody driven as some would say its Impossible.
Titinho wrote: » I am in the middle of IT vocational school but they leave a lot of gaps, they just tell you the commands to make stuff run but don’t explain how anything works.So in my free time (which is a lot) I have been studying on my own and got my CCNA and wanted to continue on to the CCNP, but I have read that a CCNP with no work experience raises “red flags”.What are your opinions about this, I will still study the CCNP material but depending on the responses I might not take the examsPS: Sorry for any horrible misspell or any weird syntax, English is not my native language
Iristheangel wrote: » I don't want to come across as wanting to discourage someone from getting a certification. In fact, I wholeheartedly support going as far as you can with a certification but remember that certifications compliment experience and not replace it. While I know there are some anecdotal stories of people getting entry level jobs with a CCNP, look at some of the older posts on this forum from people that asked similar questions. As I recall, some of our esteemed networking veterans who are in a position to hire stated that if they saw someone without experience touting a professional level certification, they either must be AMAZINGLY talented to stand out to them or they write them off as a paper cert and move on. Do a search for some of NetworkVeteran and Forsaken's old posts to see some of the kind of questions that you better be prepared to understand and answer in an interview. And then there's also skill fade: if you aren't using it, you're losing it. As I said, there's no rush. Jump into a job. Get your feet wet and once you start going, pick up those CCNP books. You'll find that the information will be retained easier when you have a real world as a lab to build and troubleshoot
charlemagne wrote: » I choose not to list all the degrees and certifications I have earned and deleted what few I did list. I'm one of the "paper cert" individuals that you described as though all people are the same and I was reminded of something akin to an ancient Greek tragedy. Experience is important. Yet, in any job one will ultimately have to prove yourself. Years ago, I entered the market with nothing but several advanced degrees and other things that are the essence of the "red flags" you described in a previous post. I succeeded. It isn't an anecdote. When you look at the current unemployment figures broken down by industry you see something that is a sad reality in today's economic situation: Many experienced, educated, motivated professionals are forced to transition into a new industry altogether. If there is any "rule" that currently has any validity it is: Uncertainty. When I read others advice I cannot fathom the logic of some. What one thinks is true another will say the opposite and, perhaps, they're both correct since each individual is unique and behind the degrees, the nice letters after one's name, certifications, etc...there is a person. "No experience" does not equal unqualified and having no experience is certainly no guarantee of failure. Experience comes in many forms and when told one "shouldn't" or "can't" succeed in a particular endeavor, I am reminded of a woman that was from the day she was born often told she would fail, would not nor could not be anything but a failure. However, she defied the endless numbers of people that said "you can't do it." She did. Her name was Helen Keller. So, I read "advice" here with more than a grain of salt and recall her words: "I am only one, but still am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something; and because I cannot do everything, I will NOT refuse to do something that I can do." I think if someone wants to take an exam and has the ability to pass and wants to do it for whatever reason, then they have free will, the freedom to make that choice. If passing will mean something to them, even in a manner no one else can understand, it isn't a question of "why" but rather "why not?" It isn't up to me to advise someone what they should or shouldn't do. I will do what I wish, take any exam I desire (if allowed) and it matters not a whit to me what someone here thinks. If I would have followed some of the "advice" given here, then I wouldn't be in my current position. The best advice is history and I mean by this looking at the many who were told they can't but did and the world is better for it.
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