Robertf969 wrote: » 79k-93K a year for someone with 5 years of InfoSec experience is low to you? How hard do you think the test is? It doesn't turn you into an InfoSec god, most of my experience is in Policy and Cyptography and I cant find a civilian job that pays anywhere near that with my particular experience (Unless I go DOD and im done with DOD). I'm looking at about 60k/yr for an analyst position right now assuming they want to wait for me to get out and im ecstatic about it.
Robertf969 wrote: » I'm assuming you work with firewalls, account provisioning, policy (thats all InfoSec according to ISC2). If you truly have Zero InfoSec experience don't even bother taking the test, you need 4 years and a degree to get endorsed.
Robertf969 wrote: » Thanks for clarifying for me beads, doing InfoSec related work qualifies you for the credential but that doesn't necessarily mean you are qualified for 100k. Unless of course Crypto Managers and C&A junkies are making 60 bucks an hour, in which case I am not looking in the right locations. Hence why I am still looking to take a Jr. Analyst position even though I have the credential.
kalkan999 wrote: » Depends on location. Experience IS key. I know someone who is an (ISC)2 associate (CISSP without the experience) making $25 an hour at a Navy help desk, and an Army Reservist Lieutenant, with a Brick and mortar bachelor's degree in computer science, but he has no experience. I've been at this for 15 years, and am well NORTH of $200k. It's about the experience and where your experience lies, how hard you're willing to work, and whether or not you're willing to work alongside someone like b/eads without throttling him every day. *Sigh* For every one of me, there are five B/eads. The scoffing, smart, arrogant, introverted IT guys who went down the security path. They get really mad when someone personable like me comes around and motivates people with my infectious optimism, charm and wit.