Sunday, January 17, 2010

Cisco Training In Your Own Home Compared

By Jason Kendall

If Cisco training is your aspiration, and you've not yet worked with routers or network switches, you should first attempt CCNA certification. This will provide you with knowledge and skills to work with routers. The internet is made up of hundreds of thousands of routers, and large commercial ventures with many locations also need routers to allow their networks to keep in touch.

It's very probable you'll get a job with an internet service provider or a big organisation which is located on multiple sites but still wants secure internal data communication. These jobs are well paid and in demand.

It's advisable to do a bespoke training program that will take you through a specific training path ahead of starting your training in Cisco skills.

Proper support is incredibly important - ensure you track down something that provides 24x7 direct access, as anything less will not satisfy and will also impede your ability to learn.

Beware of institutions who use call-centres 'out-of-hours' - with the call-back coming in during office hours. It's no use when you're stuck on a problem and could do with an answer during your scheduled study period.

The very best programs opt for a web-based round-the-clock system utilising a variety of support centres over many time-zones. You will have an environment which switches seamlessly to the best choice of centres any time of the day or night: Support when it's needed.

Always choose a training company that gives this level of learning support. As only round-the-clock 24x7 support gives you the confidence to make it.

Considering the amount of options that are available, there's no surprise that nearly all newcomers to the industry get stuck choosing the job they will follow.

Because without any solid background in computing, how should we possibly understand what someone in a particular job does?

Consideration of several areas is vital if you want to expose the right answers:

* Personalities play an important part - what things get your juices flowing, and what are the areas that put a frown on your face.

* What time-frame are you looking at for your training?

* How highly do you rate salary - is it the most important thing, or is job satisfaction higher up on your priority-list?

* Considering the huge variation that computing covers, you really need to be able to take in what is different.

* Taking a cold, hard look at the level of commitment, time and effort you can give.

To be honest, it's obvious that the only real way to investigate these matters tends to be through a good talk with an advisor or professional who has years of experience in IT (as well as it's commercial requirements.)

A lot of students presume that the traditional school, college or university path is the way they should go. Why then are commercially accredited qualifications beginning to overtake it?

Corporate based study (to use industry-speak) is far more specialised and product-specific. Industry has realised that this level of specialised understanding is essential to meet the requirements of an increasingly more technical marketplace. Adobe, Microsoft, CISCO and CompTIA are the dominant players.

Of course, an appropriate quantity of relevant additional information has to be covered, but focused specialised knowledge in the required areas gives a commercially trained person a distinct advantage.

What if you were an employer - and you required somebody who had very specific skills. What is easier: Trawl through loads of academic qualifications from several applicants, trying to establish what they know and which vocational skills they've acquired, or choose particular accreditations that specifically match what you're looking for, and make your short-list from that. Your interviews are then about personal suitability - rather than on the depth of their technical knowledge.

Be alert that all exams you're studying for are recognised by industry and are up-to-date. Training companies own certificates are not normally useful in gaining employment.

Only nationally recognised certification from the likes of Microsoft, Cisco, CompTIA and Adobe will be useful to a future employer.

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