9 classes can be knocked out in 6 months via online classes. Whats the issue?
nah, one semester which is 3-4 months
9 classes can be knocked out in 6 months via online classes. Whats the issue?
My cousin in IT told me my goal should be to aim for a CISSP and that it can get you 100k a year
Y'all agree?
CISSP and no experience aint getting you that much. Lol cats gotta stop putting emphasis on certs like it is somekind of magical key. They help but they arent a gaurentee.My cousin in IT told me my goal should be to aim for a CISSP and that it can get you 100k a year
Y'all agree?
I feel you.CISSP and no experience aint getting you that much. Lol cats gotta stop putting emphasis on certs like it is somekind of magical key. They help but they arent a gaurentee.
Yes. But you cant get a CISSP without at least 5 years experience. So work on experience and other foundational certs first. then the CISSP when you have that experience.My cousin in IT told me my goal should be to aim for a CISSP and that it can get you 100k a year
Y'all agree?
its a good end/later goal, but the experience you would need to get the CISSP you would be close to 6 figures anyways (probably already making 60-80k depending on your city).I feel you.
Is that a cert I should aim for tho?
its a good end/later goal, but the experience you would need to get the CISSP you would be close to 6 figures anyways (probably already making 60-80k depending on your city).
I dont know how much experience you have now or if you are even in the field yet though. IMO set 3-6-9-11 yr Goals for yourself. You dont have to think. If you are trying to get into the field then make a 3 yr goal, once you hit that then set your 6 yr goal, once you hit that set a 9/10 yr goal, after that your 10/11 yr goal. With IT you cant get comfortable as every 3-4 yrs things change and something new is hot so you always have to improve your skill set.
Somebody talk to me about moving up with an education vs. experience.
I got my A+ last month. Opened a LOT of doors and I start my first job in 2 weeks. Dilemma is, I can finish out 2 Associates by 2018... but none of the classes I have left will be easy for me. Programming, economics, a litany of algebra classes. I'm taking prerequisites now, and I went from having a 3.75 to all C's. Got me ready to drop out looking at that student loan debt.
So... at this point in the industry, what's the likelihood of gaining promotions? Experience and certs vs. degree?
You'll be overlooked for management positions. Why not finish your education?
This thread has been nothing but good to me as of late. I found a post of mine waaaay back in 2013 struggling with Java and in the last 2 1/2 years, tossed school to the bushes (less than 30 credits to go), had a kid, and ended up working a helpdesk/customer support gig with a major cable company for a year (as recommended in this very thread). I was promoted soon after to a department that pretty much does low-level account analysis and resolving order entry errors. We use remedy however only for submitting tickets, not resolving them. The work is beyond rudimentary and the pay is evidence of that...Not even challenging or satisfying.
SO I decided to take the long way here and read every page of this thread (ALSO as suggested)..You skippin', you trippin'
That said I have one question because its kind of a running theme every dozen pages or so:
With an A+ in tow, should one aim for Network+ THEN ccent-ccna or jump straight to ccent-ccna? I've read of the "suggested" pre-reqs/skills needed to go for ccent and basically an A+ is more than sufficient according to some however others suggest there are concepts/language in ccent worth being acclimated with prior to pursuing?
Holla at me brehs...
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Def get CCNA dont even waste your time thinking about getting an N+This thread has been nothing but good to me as of late. I found a post of mine waaaay back in 2013 struggling with Java and in the last 2 1/2 years, tossed school to the bushes (less than 30 credits to go), had a kid, and ended up working a helpdesk/customer support gig with a major cable company for a year (as recommended in this very thread). I was promoted soon after to a department that pretty much does low-level account analysis and resolving order entry errors. We use remedy however only for submitting tickets, not resolving them. The work is beyond rudimentary and the pay is evidence of that...Not even challenging or satisfying.
SO I decided to take the long way here and read every page of this thread (ALSO as suggested)..You skippin', you trippin'
That said I have one question because its kind of a running theme every dozen pages or so:
With an A+ in tow, should one aim for Network+ THEN ccent-ccna or jump straight to ccent-ccna? I've read of the "suggested" pre-reqs/skills needed to go for ccent and basically an A+ is more than sufficient according to some however others suggest there are concepts/language in ccent worth being acclimated with prior to pursuing?
Holla at me brehs...
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