Are you toying with the idea of doing an MCSE? It’s very possible then that it’s likely you’ll come into one of two categories: You’re currently an IT professional and you’d like to gain accreditation with the Microsoft qualification. Alternatively you might be just about to enter the IT environment, and you’ve found that there are many opportunities for certified networking professionals.
When looking into training companies, make sure you steer clear of those who cut costs by failing to use the most up-to-date Microsoft version. Such institutions will hold back the student as they will have been learning from the wrong MCSE version which doesn’t match the present exams, so it could be impossible for them to pass.
Avoid businesses who’re just out to sell you anything. You should be given detailed advice to ensure you are on the right course for you. Don’t allow yourself to be sold some generic product by some pushy sales person.
Consider only retraining programs which will lead to industry accepted accreditations. There’s an endless list of small companies pushing their own ‘in-house’ certificates which are worthless when it comes to finding a job.
From a commercial standpoint, only the big-boys like Microsoft, Adobe, Cisco or CompTIA (for instance) will get you into the interview seat. Nothing else makes the grade.
A service that many training companies provide is job placement assistance. This is to assist your search for your first position. The need for this feature can be bigged up out of proportion though – it’s quite easy for eager sales people to overplay it. The fact of the matter is, the still growing need for IT personnel in the UK is why employers will be interested in you.
Help with your CV and interview techniques may be available (if not, see one of our sites for help). Make sure you work on your old CV today – don’t wait until you’ve finished your exams!
Various junior support jobs have been offered to trainees who are still learning and haven’t even passed a single exam yet. At the very least this will get your CV into the ‘possible’ pile and not the ‘no’ pile.
If you’d like to keep travelling time and costs to a minimum, then it’s quite likely that an independent and specialised local employment service may be more appropriate than some national concern, for they’re going to be familiar with the jobs that are going locally.
To bottom line it, if you put the same amount of effort into securing your first job as into training, you won’t find it too challenging. Some people bizarrely spend hundreds of hours on their training and studies and do nothing more once they’ve passed their exams and seem to expect employers to find them.
OK, why should we consider qualifications from the commercial sector rather than traditional academic qualifications gained through schools, colleges or universities?
With the costs of academic degree’s becoming a tall order for many, and the IT sector’s increasing awareness that corporate based study is often far more commercially relevant, there’s been a dramatic increase in Microsoft, CompTIA, CISCO and Adobe accredited training programmes that create knowledgeable employees for considerably less.
This is done through concentrating on the skills that are really needed (together with an appropriate level of related knowledge,) rather than going into the heightened depths of background ‘padding’ that degrees in computing can get bogged down in – to fill a three or four year course.
It’s a bit like the TV advert: ‘It does what it says on the tin’. All an employer has to do is know what areas need to be serviced, and then match up the appropriate exam numbers as a requirement. That way they can be sure they’re interviewing applicants who can do the job.
We can’t make a big enough deal out of this point: It’s essential to obtain proper 24×7 round-the-clock support from professional instructors. Later, you’ll kick yourself if you don’t heed this.
Don’t buy study programmes that only provide support to trainees via a message system when it’s outside of usual working hours. Training organisations will give you every excuse in the book why you don’t need this. Essentially – support is required when it’s required – not as-and-when it’s suitable for their staff.
World-class organisations utilise an online access round-the-clock system combining multiple support operations throughout multiple time-zones. You’ll have an easy to use environment which accesses the most appropriate office at any time of day or night: Support available as-and-when you want it.
Don’t accept second best when you’re looking for the right support service. Most IT hopefuls who throw in the towel, are in that situation because of support (or the lack of).
(C) S. Edwards 2009. Hop over to www.INeedANewCareer.co.uk/LINANC.html or HTML Training.
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