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...Home ... Editorial ... Columns ..Column Story Sunday: January 3, 2010
TechMentor Conferences


 Certification Advisor  
Greg Neilson
Greg Neilson


 Just What Are You Waiting For?
Greg shares with you the advice he gave to his IT staff: Own your career now, or face losing it later.
by Greg Neilson  
10/9/2002 -- The following is based on an e-mail I sent to my staff this week. While many of them are doing a great job at keeping themselves current with the latest technologies, there are too many for whom I feel I am more interested in their career than they are. Many CertCities.com readers will similarly already be actively managing their skills growth, but this column may be of benefit for those still employed in IT who don't now feel the same need to keep themselves up to date. This discusses Windows NT skills, but many of the same arguments could be made about COBOL programmers, for example.

Today is the first week of October. That means we now have only 12 weeks left this year. Many of you have talked about wanting to improve yourselves technically and complete a certification, yet from my view less than a handful of you seem serious enough about this to actually achieve anything in 2002.

I admit that I am an extreme case and am always driven to continually learn more, but I still find myself alarmed at how complacent and comfortable many of you seem to be in your career in IT. It's as if you would be happy just toiling away with NT 4.0 for the rest of your working life, even if that was another 20, 30 or 40 years away. But NT 4.0 is now six years old, and one could make a good argument that this version was merely another of the incremental upgrades to NT since the original release in 1993. That makes this technology essentially nine years old! Many of you were not even working in IT back in 1993.

Even the NT follow-on product, Win2K, is almost three years old, yet the majority of you don't have extensive skills with it. In an era where companies have been cutting education dollars we have done very well to get everyone attending Win2K education, yet I acknowledge that these classes alone can never be enough. You will always need to supplement classroom education with self-study in your own time. Completing a certification program then after attending classes is not only useful to readily demonstrate your skills, but also to retain and build on the learning from those courses.

I've alluded to forthcoming technology changes, and I'm sure that you all know that Windows .NET Server is destined for release early in 2003. But if we look at the bigger stage, there's so much more. The R&D now underway by some of the main software vendors will lead to systems that will require much less staff to actually build and manage them. Those staff still required will be those highly skilled people who configure and monitor the health of these essentially self-managing systems.

From a business viewpoint, companies in around the world are very interested in the outsourcing opportunities offered from countries such as India. In the past, this has been primarily in the area of application development, but with the rapidly growing communications capabilities available worldwide, this has increasingly led to this being used for systems management outsourcing as well. As I see it, there is no way that we can compete on price alone, so one option available is to concentrate on the more higher-level value-added services. When building and managing servers becomes a commodity, then we are going to need specialized skills and capabilities to stay ahead of the game. Otherwise, we will likely be forced into a change of career outside IT. (I'm not here to debate the merits of globalization, but I simply want to acknowledge it and outline how we might adjust to it).

Let's also look at the positive side of the future. I think most industry commentators are of the view that IT activity will start to pick up from the current levels within six to 12 months. This will mean that we will need people to take a lead role in important and exciting projects that implement these newer hot technologies. These exciting opportunities will likely present themselves to those who are most qualified for them -- to the high performers with demonstrated higher levels of skill.

In this day and age, we will never have lifetime employment, but we can work hard to ensure that we have lifetime employability. I can assist you here in your career development, but you owe it to yourself to OWN your career. Many of the changes I have talked about here are not going happen overnight -- or perhaps not even next year -- but who can say where things will be in five years time or longer? All of the above is just my personal view, and is intended only to get you actively thinking about your future. Just what are you waiting for?

Questions? Comments? Post your thoughts below!


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.

 


More articles by Greg Neilson:

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There are 50 CertCities.com user Comments for “Just What Are You Waiting For?”
Page 2 of 5
10/16/02: Wombat says: Easy Certifications like Microsoft are not worth much. Then again, you won't find very many unemployed CCIEs. Salaries may be down a bit, but they are all working.
10/16/02: Stephanie says: Great Wombat....thank God we have your 2 cents in this conversation....(hint - Get a life)
10/16/02: Apu says: Please learn me MCSE
10/16/02: DaRkNeSs says: It seems every article and post on this site always sparks up an MCSE crap fest. I would think MCSE is worth somthing otherwise no one would try to get it. But I will admit that I dislike Microsoft and I do not have any microsoft certs. It seems to me people lose sleep over certifications sometimes.
10/16/02: Hamd says: Apu - It very easy sir. Find "boot camp" taught by ex-Microsoft instructors in Florida. Pay money. They give you test answers. You take tests. Bill to your fine company. You enjoy Florida. You have learned.
10/16/02: Apu says: I go Boot Camp. Instructor tell me i make 60,000. Explain me who is bill?
10/16/02: DaRkNeSs says: Apu, Maybe you should stick with the quicky mart. You will not make 60k with just an MCSE. There are a lot of people here in hell who had MCSE's and they to me that. Get MCP and Maybe A+ then get experience, then MCSE. chee chopa chowa
10/16/02: Apu says: DaRkNeSs - Explain me "and they to me that"? Instructor say MCSE make 60 to 80000. Course only 10000. This is great deal!
10/17/02: Brian A says: I see all of you complaining about the certification process in general. Well truthfully in some aspects you are right. Certification is hard and expensive, but if you want to be a truly respected I.T professional you must have them. I hear you guys talk badly about the MCSE. Well MCSE make the money starting at around 40 and going all the way to 60,000 per year. I know people that got the NT 4.0 MCSE and still have great jobs. You are completely right about the experience though. If you have no experience ever and have an MCSE or whatever certification people will immediatley peg you as paper and you won't get a job. Go get your college degree in something to do with computers then get the a+ and NET+ and maybe an MCP then try to get a job. You will find them. Then get about 3 years experience and follow your certification path with whatever you decide you like. MCSE,CCNP,OCP there is a whole alphabet soup of certifications out there for everyone. I got my job in 3 weeks because of certification. It just takes time and effort.
10/17/02: Becky Nagel says: Hi Apu -- If you look at the salary surveys on MCPMag.com, you'll see that only network admins with many years of experience and an MCSE make that kind of money -- if they're lucky. If you make anything close to that out of the gate in this day and age, then you've won the lottery. Although he could have said it *much* nicer, I do think he gave you sound advice.
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