Congratulations! As you’re reading this article you’ve doubtless been pondering on retraining for a new career – so you’ve already done more than most. A small minority of us are happy and fulfilled in our work, but it’s rare anyone does more than moan. You could join a select group who take responsibility for their future.
On the subject of training, it’s important that you first make a list of what you want and don’t want from the position you would like to get. Be sure that you would be more satisfied before you put a lot of energy into changing the direction of your life. We recommend looking at the whole story first, to make the right judgements:
* Would you like to work with others? If you say yes, are you a team player or is meeting new people important to you? Maybe you’d rather be left alone to get on with things?
* What criteria are fundamentally important with regard to the sector of industry you’ll be employed in?
* Is this the last time you plan to retrain, and if it is, do you believe this career choice will allow you to do that?
* Would you like your training course to be in a market sector where you believe you will be able to work up to retirement age?
We ask you to find out more about Information Technology – there are greater numbers of roles than staff to fill them, because it’s one of the few choices of career where the sector is still growing. Despite the opinions of certain people, it isn’t just geeks looking at screens the whole time (some jobs are like that of course.) Most positions are occupied by ordinary men and women who want to earn a very good living.
An advisor that doesn’t question you thoroughly – it’s likely they’re just a salesperson. If they push a particular product before getting to know your background and current experience level, then you know you’re being sold to.
With a bit of real-world experience or certification, your starting-point of learning is very different to someone completely new.
It’s wise to consider a user-skills course first. Beginning there can make the learning curve a much easier going.
One area often overlooked by those mulling over a new direction is the concept of ‘training segmentation’. This is essentially the breakdown of the materials for drop-shipping to you, which vastly changes the point you end up at.
By and large, you’ll join a programme that takes between and 1 and 3 years and get sent one module each time you pass an exam. While this may sound logical on one level, consider this:
What would happen if you didn’t finish every module at the proposed pace? Often the staged order doesn’t work as well as some other order of studying might.
Put simply, the best option is to have a copy of their prescribed order of study, but make sure you have all of your learning modules right from the beginning. Everything is then in your possession in case you don’t finish at their required pace.
With all the options available, does it really shock us that a large majority of newcomers to the industry don’t really understand the best career path they should even pursue.
Flicking through a list of odd-sounding and meaningless job titles is no use whatsoever. The majority of us have no concept what our next-door neighbours do at work each day – so we’re in the dark as to the intricacies of a specific IT job.
To attack this, a discussion is necessary, covering a variety of unique issues:
* Your personality type and interests – what working tasks you enjoy or dislike.
* What sort of time-frame do you want for the retraining?
* Have you thought about salary vs job satisfaction?
* Many students don’t properly consider the work involved to get fully certified.
* The time and energy you’ll set aside for getting qualified.
At the end of the day, the only real way of covering these is by means of a long chat with an advisor who knows the industry well enough to be able to guide you.
Watch out that all exams you’re working towards are recognised by industry and are up-to-date. ‘In-house’ certificates are generally useless.
From a commercial standpoint, only the top companies like Microsoft, Cisco, Adobe or CompTIA (to give some examples) will get you short-listed. Nothing else hits the mark.
Copyright 2009 Scott Edwards. Pop over to home-computer-courses.co.uk or This Site.