If you’re thinking about studying to get an MCSE, you’re probably in 1 of 2 situations. You could be about to get into the IT environment, and your research tells you this commercial sector has many opportunities for men and women who are commercially qualified. On the other hand you may be someone with a certain amount of knowledge ready to formalise your skill set with a qualification such as MCSE.
When looking into training providers, make it a policy to stay away from those who cut costs by not providing the current Microsoft version. This is a false economy for the trainee due to the fact that they’ll have learned an out-of-date syllabus which doesn’t fall in with the present exams, so they’ll probably fail. Providers ought to be devoted to discovering the ultimate program for prospective students. Mentoring education is as much concerned with guiding people on establishing which way to go, as much as giving them help to get there.
You have to be sure that all your certifications are current and also valid commercially – don’t even consider courses which lead to some in-house certificate (which is as useless as if you’d printed it yourself). Only properly recognised accreditation from the likes of Microsoft, CompTIA, Cisco and Adobe will have any meaning to employers.
Don’t put too much store, as can often be the case, on the training course itself. Training is not an end in itself; this is about gaining commercial employment. You need to remain focused on where you want to go. You could be training for only a year and end up performing the job-role for decades. Avoid the mistake of choosing what sounds like a program of interest to you and then spend decades in a job you hate!
Be honest with yourself about what you want to earn and what level of ambition fits you. Usually, this will point the way to which particular accreditations will be expected and what you can expect to give industry in return. We’d recommend you seek advice from an experienced industry professional before settling on a study path, so there’s no doubt that the chosen route will give you the skills necessary.
Commercial qualifications are now, without a doubt, beginning to replace the more academic tracks into the IT sector – why then is this happening? Vendor-based training (to use industry-speak) is far more specialised and product-specific. Industry has become aware that specialisation is what’s needed to service the demands of an increasingly more technical world. Adobe, Microsoft, CISCO and CompTIA dominate in this arena. University courses, as a example, often get bogged down in a lot of loosely associated study – and a syllabus that’s too generalised. This prevents a student from learning the core essentials in sufficient depth.
Assuming a company is aware what areas need to be serviced, then all it takes is an advert for someone with a specific qualification. The syllabuses all have to conform to the same requirements and don’t change between schools (as academic syllabuses often do).
We can’t make a big enough deal out of this point: Always get full 24×7 professional support from mentors and instructors. You will have so many problems later if you don’t adhere to this. Avoid those companies who use call-centres ‘out-of-hours’ – with your call-back scheduled for typical office hours. This is no use if you’re stuck and could do with an answer during your scheduled study period.
Top training companies utilise several support facilities active in different time-zones. They use an online interactive interface to link them all seamlessly, at any time you choose, help is just seconds away, with no hassle or contact issues. Search out an educator that cares. Because only live 24×7 round-the-clock support delivers what is required.
Those that are drawn to this type of work are often very practical, and won’t enjoy sitting at a desk in class, and struggling through thick study-volumes. If this is putting you off studying, try the newer style of interactive study, where you can learn everything on-screen. If we can get all of our senses involved in our learning, then we normally see dramatically better results.
The latest audio-visual interactive programs utilising video demo’s and practice lab’s will beat books every time. And you’ll actually enjoy doing them. It’s wise to view some examples of the kind of training materials you’ll be using before you sign on the dotted line. Always insist on instructor-led video demonstrations and a variety of audio-visual and interactive sections.
It’s folly to opt for on-line only training. Connection quality and reliability varies hugely across all internet service providers, make sure you get disc based courseware (On CD or DVD).