thadizzy wrote: » First of all the CCIE implies you know the 802.11 protocol quite well already. The Cisco certificate is vendor specific while the CWNP/CWSP certificates are only concerned with 802.11 standard and wireless in general. For an employeer if you have Cisco infrastructure, going for the Cisco education will benefit him more since you learn to do acctual detailed configuration and troubleshooting in the Cisco infrastructure, you will not get that from the CWNP/CWSP. Look at the market share on the market you are interested to work within and then decide. Cisco is extremely strong in the wireless enterprise segment so with that in mind it made sense to me to focus on Cisco as a vendor. Ideally one should go for both certification tracks since they are very different and do complement each other - but you must realize the CWNP/CWSP material is much more abstract. For day to day work, you benefit more from being an expert at a vendor's solution than knowing every little detail about the 802.11 protocol, of course there will be exceptions. My personal experience is that in Europe employers do not know about the CWNP/CWSP/CWNE certificates, while the CCIE is much more well known and got a much higher reputation. On a technical level the CCIE-Wireless is much more difficult to achieve than the CWNE, however they are not really comparable. The job market for strong wireless candidates is ridicilously good these days and this market increase in size every day. Wireless as a technology is expanding faster than any other technology in the network segment - but the number of experts do not keep up right now which makes the demand for the best ones extremely high. You will get offered top pay and a really good position even without CCIE/CWNE but of course it will definetly boost you CV if you have them.
pert wrote: » Am I correct in thinking that almost all CCIE level wireless jobs are for resellers / msp / vendors? It seems like a field where you would need to travel ALL the time.