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Greg Neilson
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Great Expectations |
What's certification really worth these days? |
by Greg Neilson |
6/12/2002 -- As you might have seen from my previous columns, I'm a big believer in the value of certification. I have some myself and I'm continually encouraging my staff to keep moving on their planned certifications. However, due to the many negative comments about certification I've seen posted here and elsewhere recently, I've begun to wonder whether many people have too many expectations about its value.
A certification is a great asset. But just as the shiny new convertible depreciates the minute you drive it away, so too does your certification. Within two to four years of earning a cert, either the vendor will explicitly make it obsolete or the underlying technology has changed so much that you'll need to recertifiy to demonstrate your knowledge. Therefore, you need to be clear that once you do embark on a certification path, it won't hold its value forever and you'll need to regularly update it.
I still get e-mails from people asking about career opportunities in IT once they complete a certification program. Unfortunately these folks seem to have unrealistic expectations about the ease of entering IT, let alone the types of roles that they are qualified to perform once their certification is completed. There is no short cut to IT riches, and I'm not sure that there ever was. I don't know if it was ever true that certification alone is the ticket to earning $60-70K+, but it sure isn't the case anymore! The only way I can explain this is that, in the past, some of the really early adopters of certification had nothing but their own experience and the product manuals (if they were lucky!) to use to prepare for exams. Then, when usage of these products started booming, those folks who had extensive experience were in huge demand. In many cases they had completed the certification, but this was simply a demonstration of their theoretical knowledge -- it was their extensive practical knowledge that employers were excited about. From a distance, perhaps others got the mistaken impression that it was the certification alone that was their source of value to employers and customers, but I would have hoped that these days this myth was largely dispelled. In my work at CertCities.com's sister magazine, Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine, I know that the editorial staff have tried very hard over the last few years to pass on the message in their annual salary survey results that experience is a very important factor in the salary levels reported. However, I suspect that in many cases people are too busy looking at the dollar numbers in the tables to read any of the accompanying text!
The last area of confusion is to those who appear to confuse a certification with a career. Someone who now wants to work as a DBA on say Oracle, DB2 or SQL Server needs to know that there is so much more to these roles than just the requirements of these certification programs alone. It's one thing to know all of the wonderful commands and their switches, but it's another altogether to know what you should use in a given situation. Education and certification can assist in giving us the latest theoretical knowledge, but there's no substitute for years in the field. In this case, building a career as a DBA is not the same as completing a certification in a database product.
The same is particularly true of the developer arena. Most programming exams focus on language and class library implementation/API details, yet experience in the the art of good analysis, design and testing is probably more important in a successful career as a developer than just the code itself. In other words, just because you get an MCSD, it doesn't mean you're qualified to be an application developer.
Completing a certification can be a valuable asset in your career, but it alone won't and can't take you very far. (For anyone that thinks I'm just down on certification, I also believe that the same is true of a degree -- you really need the practical experience in combination with the theoretical knowledge to be valuable to an employer.) What do you think is reasonable to expect from a certification these days? Let me know by posting your comments below. 
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Greg Neilson, MCSE+Internet, MCNE, PCLP, is a Contributing Editor for Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine and a manager at a large IT services firm in Australia. He's the author of Lotus Domino Administration in a Nutshell (O'Reilly and Associates, ISBN 1-56592-717-6). You can reach him at Attn: Greg.
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There are 86 user Comments for “Great Expectations”
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Page 2 of 9
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6/16/02: obsolete MCT says: |
this is the the "MOST REALISTIC COLUMN" I have ever read on this site....THANKS GREG!!!!thanks for opening some peoples eyes, especially mines. i better make preperations for fall semester...wish me luck everyone. |
6/17/02: CARRIE says: |
I AM A PAPER ORACLE DBA. I BELIEVE THAT REAL WORLD EXPERIENCES ARE MORE IMPORTANT THAN JUST GETTING CERTIFIED. IN THE CURRENT JOB MARKET, MOST OPENINGS REQUIRE FOR AT LEAST 3-5 YEARS EXPERIENCES. BUT EVERY ONE NEEDS TO BE GIVEN OPPORTUNITIES TO GET EXPERIENCES. |
6/19/02: Blitz says: |
Carrie, for sure, experience doesn't come cheap. Instead of waiting to be *GIVEN* the opportunities for experience, why don't you *INITIATE* the opportunities. e.g by doing volunteer jobs. What normally happened is, when the company start seeing the fruit of your volunteer labour for the company (increasing productivity/reduce cost/etc) and they have budget for additional head count, more often than not, they'll recruit you on board first before they look outside in the market. My $0.02 worth ... |
6/19/02: RDUCK56 says: |
Experience is extremely important. Once you have the experience, then go after the certifications and use the training whether it be via books, classroom or a home network lab or all the above to round out your rough edges and fill in the gaps in your knowledge and skillsets that you haven't acquired via experience. I started off in the Help Desk and software training route and then got an opportunity to work closely with an old time Novell CNE who was more than willing to help me and mentor me. Later when I went to another company as their PC tech and they decided to add a network to their AS400 environment I was the natural person to assume the network admin role. The VAR's MCSE again was a willing mentor to help me along as he helped my company establish their Windows network. From there I read and studied on my own to better perform my job. By the time I started working on obtaining my MCSE I had already been working with Novell and Windows NT combined for more than five years. When I got my current position as a full blown network administrator for a manufacturer my certifications helped me get myself at the top of the stack of resumes but I believe my real world experience clinched the job. |
6/19/02: Tcat Houser says: |
Wow. Both the article and the comments here are dead on! I don't think that Collage degree is a requirement for *everyone*, and the call here to commitment is the bottom line. I am enjoying my 38th year in MIS/IS/IT, and have no plans to stop. My avg. time for a cert test is one every 3 months.... (Yeah, I'm slowing down from 1 a month.) They are not always completely real-world, and they do demo. commitment.... (along with the home test lab). |
6/19/02: Lou says: |
I agree a college degree is a requirement, but is not a necessity when landing a job. The necessity is that one should not expect the high paying job which an experienced professional has earned by walking out of the education system. I have gone through a career change going from factory work to Systems Messaging Infrastructure Design & Implementation. I have a Lotus & MS certification. My first experience was as an intern during the same time period I took college classes at night. |
6/19/02: Kobe MCSE says: |
Bogus article, I'm a Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer which means I'm cerfitied to install, configure, manage and troubleshoot Windows Networks. So what If I don't have 5 years experience, in fact I HAVE less than a year experience. Employers still think I'm paper Certified, YA RIGHT!, If you're good, you're good, why do you need experience. Look at Kobe Bryant or Kevin Garnett from the NBA, they're both high school kids with no experience and look at them now. They didn't need experience, they were good when they got there. It's the same with IT. It's different with people, some people are faster than others. In my case, I'm an expert already. It's just sad that people devalue my MCSE cert. All I can say is if you want to be in IT, start your own business and don't rely on these employers who expect their IT canditate to be MCSE, A+, CCNA, Oracle Certifed plus a BS Computer Degree and 5 + years experience, some of these employers got to be a realistic, you can't expect to be this person all in 1. I'm just sick of these False promises especially this website and other websites that promote big bucks on getting certified and MCP magazine and their big salary surveys...BOGUS, BOGUS, BOGUS, they should be ashame with themselves. |
6/19/02: mcdaddy says: |
I have 19 years experience installing/maintaining/repairing computer systems. In the past two years I have obtained A+,Network+,CNA, and MCSE.I have 12 years experience installing SCO products and the seven years prior that was with proprietary O/S's. I am in the computer field because I love it. The money fluctuates and this has always beeen the nature of IT in my eyes.The Dot.com bust has hurt all of us in the IT industry, but it will bounce back again. IT people are needed in almost every business in America in some fashion or another. I have not received any monetary reward from my certification's yet, but I do feel personally rewarded in a job well done. It does take time and effort to obtain certs and I still believe they are of value. If you don't really like IT then do something else, because working in IT will mean working after hours and weekends. Just ask anybody in IT. Just my thoughts. |
6/19/02: JJ says: |
Well I have a BA (Math from the University of Chicago - when I was there they killed the IS program and moved all the courses, and students into the Math department), 24 years experience programming and systems analysis, 12 networking, 10 years management, an MCSE, MCDBA, MCSD, IBM Certified Specialist AIX, Cisco CCNA, Sun Certified for JAVA2, with a minimum of 5 years experience with each of the requirements for the certs, and can't even get a call back or interview. It seems that everyone wants an MBA now for any project lead/managment position, and real world experience is a negative checkmark from HR... Just another perspective. |
6/20/02: JB says: |
Having 36 yrs experience with no certs - I've never had trouble getting the jobs that really mattered. All the cert does is show you've passed some tests, doesn't show if you "know" the subject matter or that you've passed real live tests. The worst sys admin I've managed was an MSCE. I always seek someone who can solve a problem in the interview - simple and least costly approach is what is needed, not a book answer. |
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