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borumas wrote: Well you don't want to get to many certs if you do not have experience to back it up or people will not really want to hire you, I got hired with an A+ cert and my associates degree over a guy who was an MCP, Net+, and CNA certified. The boss told me that he hired me over that guy because they thought the guy would only work till something better came along shortly and leave so they took me over him. .
caswell22 wrote: borumas wrote: Well you don't want to get to many certs if you do not have experience to back it up or people will not really want to hire you, I got hired with an A+ cert and my associates degree over a guy who was an MCP, Net+, and CNA certified. The boss told me that he hired me over that guy because they thought the guy would only work till something better came along shortly and leave so they took me over him. . that maybe a good point! im going to start looking hard for an entry level job as soon as i have hot my MCSA i should have it done by 2 - 3 months. i have paid for traning for MCSE i have a year left to complete it all.
sprkymrk wrote: caswell22 wrote: borumas wrote: Well you don't want to get to many certs if you do not have experience to back it up or people will not really want to hire you, I got hired with an A+ cert and my associates degree over a guy who was an MCP, Net+, and CNA certified. The boss told me that he hired me over that guy because they thought the guy would only work till something better came along shortly and leave so they took me over him. . that maybe a good point! im going to start looking hard for an entry level job as soon as i have hot my MCSA i should have it done by 2 - 3 months. i have paid for traning for MCSE i have a year left to complete it all. I completely disagree. Get all the certs you can whenever you can. There is no rule that says you have to put them all on your resume if you're afraid "too many" certs will cause you to lose the job.
Well you don't want to get to many certs if you do not have experience to back it up or people will not really want to hire you...
briangl wrote: Well you don't want to get to many certs if you do not have experience to back it up or people will not really want to hire you... So, if I am intelligent, hard working, have some ambition, am getting a technical education and want to better myself, this will be seen as a negative?
So, if I am intelligent, hard working, have some ambition, am getting a technical education and want to better myself, this will be seen as a negative?
I agree, in no way is having certs going to hurt anyone. That boss very well could have said the same about a degree .
borumas wrote: So, if I am intelligent, hard working, have some ambition, am getting a technical education and want to better myself, this will be seen as a negative? I agree, in no way is having certs going to hurt anyone. That boss very well could have said the same about a degree . So if your hiring for a mid level to entry level position are you going to hire a guy with a cert that you need knowing he will likely stick around to gain experience and maybe grow with your organization, or are you going to hire someone who is way overqualified for the position and whom you will waste time and $ training to fill the job- only to have him jump ship in a few months when a more qualified higher paying job opens up for them somewhere else? It's just common sense that any employer is going to want to hire someone who they feel with be worth training and who will not be leaving them shortly after getting the job, hiring people is a very big pain for employers usually and they want people that will be with them for a few years, not just a few months. That was the point I was trying to make, although not listing all your certs for a lower qualifying job is a good idea.
It's called being overqualified for the job.
So if your hiring for a mid level to entry level position are you going to hire a guy with a cert that you need knowing he will likely stick around to gain experience and maybe grow with your organization, or are you going to hire someone who is way overqualified for the position and whom you will waste time and $ training to fill the job- only to have him jump ship in a few months when a more qualified higher paying job opens up for them somewhere else? It's just common sense that any employer is going to want to hire someone who they feel with be worth training and who will not be leaving them shortly after getting the job, hiring people is a very big pain for employers usually and they want people that will be with them for a few years, not just a few months.
Why would I be applying for a lower level job with lower pay? That’s not going to happen. Also, what you are describing is false, jobs where people are hired in it at a lower level and trained have the highest turn over rate, employees get trained and certified, get experience and then go get a higher paying job.
borumas wrote: Why would I be applying for a lower level job with lower pay? That’s not going to happen. Also, what you are describing is false, jobs where people are hired in it at a lower level and trained have the highest turn over rate, employees get trained and certified, get experience and then go get a higher paying job. Good luck then, I guess you have never had the experience of applying for a job with your Net+ and MCP for which you should be perfect for, only to find out that they have several hundred applicants, many of whom are MCSE's and CCNA's on top of it. Then you think to yourself "these guys are way to overqualified for this job" and you find that since the market is saturated with these certified people that they are trying to get any job they can to stay in the field of IT- this has been my experience many times in my area. Heck, I was unemployed for 9 months trying to find work and getting beat out by allot of overqualified people for cruddy jobs before I got my current one 5 years ago. Maybe things are better where you are, I hope they are as it really sucks when you study hard for certs and still can't get work.
="it really sucks when you study hard for certs and still can't get work".
caswell22 wrote: ="it really sucks when you study hard for certs and still can't get work". the training center i am at guarentees a job within 6 months of passing MCSE and sercurity + if they dont find you a job you get your training fee returned.
rcoop wrote: Always make sure you contribute to the company more than you cost, and that you work hard, as if you owned the company. Be humble, be honest, respect others, and never trade the "easy way out" over the "right way". I try to live by that every day.
rcoop wrote: I wish everyone best of luck in their job search, and realize that you don't have to start in tech support or as a bench tech (they are tough jobs, with not a lot of pats on the back either), and you'll be better rounded understanding general business concepts and being about to talk intelligently and respectfully with other people. Always make sure you contribute to the company more than you cost, and that you work hard, as if you owned the company. Be humble, be honest, respect others, and never trade the "easy way out" over the "right way". I try to live by that every day.
caswell22 wrote: the thing is i need a job what pays at least what im on now (£18 k/year) i have been looking for entry level IT jobs on sites like monster.co.uk and reed.co.uk but no one ever gets back to me, im hoping that with a couple more mcp's under my belt i will get a chance, im just worried if i get a job they will expect me to know everything cos im MCSA but with not much hands on experince im not goin to know as much as they expecting.
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