Study: Proliferation, Lack of Experience Req. May Be Hurting Certs
3/19/2003 -- According to Thomson-Prometric's third annual "Global IT Training and Certification Study," while managers overall support IT certification, the sheer number of certifications available combined with a lack of experience prerequisites "has led some managers to discontinue using certification as a way to judge the skills of job candidates."
This could be an indication of larger backlash in relation to an "everyone is doing it" trend, the study states.
In a section called "Challenges and Opportunities for the IT Certification Industry," the study's authors write:
"Following its debut as a measure of skills assessment and technological competency, IT certification has grown to take on a life of its own, with many candidates pursuing certification as a means of standing out from the crowd in a tough employment market. The impact of this trend is that...certification may be in danger of being viewed as a commodity."
"While managers appreciate that a candidate has invested time and effort in becoming certified, [managers] want more assurance or proof that a certification translates into the skills and abilities necessary to function in day-to-day IT life."
According to the study, certification does appear to be losing some power in terms of bringing monetary benefits to IT professionals. Those rewarded for their certifications with salary increases dropped 4 percent in 2002 to 18 percent. Those rewarded with a promotion stayed flat at 9 percent.
The study also says that there's a "gap" in what certified professionals see as value of certification and how managers perceive it, "specifically what certification delivers in terms of performance and competence on the job."
To combat this, the study's authors recommend that certification vendors structure exams so that they measure "both the theory behind the technology and its practical, hands-on" application as well as focus more on tying experience to specific credentials.
The study also found that managers who have less experience in the IT field (15 years or fewer) are "significantly" more likely to see the value in having a technically certified staff member as compared to more experienced managers who have been in the field for 16 years or more. The study attributes this gap to an "age of certification" -- e.g., younger managers are more accepting of certification "because it was part of their career development experience."
Other interesting findings in the study, which examines a wide variety of behaviors and attitudes toward certifications by both candidates and managers, include:
- Top reasons for IT professionals to achieve certifications in 2002 were increased credibility, assessing skills and increased compensation.
- For those already certified, there was a 4 percent point drop in those seeking certification to increase salary, and a more than 50 percent drop overall in those seeking certification in order to get a new job.
- The top benefits of certification as seen by IT managers are higher level of service (22 percent), increased productivity (20 percent) and increased credibility with clients (19 percent).
- The perceived value of certification varies by region. In China, the top reason cited by IT pros to become certified is to increase productivity (33 percent). The top reason in India and the United States is to help find a job (22 percent and 19 percent, respectively). The top reason in Latin America is to increase credibility (36 percent).
- Overall, candidates in India are the most positive toward certification, and those in Europe are least likely to reap financial benefits from certification.
- Younger candidates (under 30) are more likely to see certification as a "stepping stone" than older candidates, but less likely to take an exam due to financial considerations.
- Use of all training methods is up across the board. The use of self study products rose to 87 percent, up from 61 percent in 2001. Seventy seven percent of candidates used a self-assessment test in 2002, up from 46 percent in 2001. The use of instructor-based remained fairly stable at 47 percent, up one percentage point from the previous study.
- Instructor led training is much bigger in China (88 percent) than in other regional areas.
The 2002 study uses results obtained from more than 8,000 IT professionals, including surveys of 3,036 test-takers at worldwide Prometric centers, 5,207 survey respondents who had previously taken exams at Prometric centers, and in-depth interviews with 23 IT professionals in Chicago, London and Singapore.
A PDF of the results can be downloaded from Prometric's Web site here. -B.N. with Mike Domingo, MCPMag.com.
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There are 63 user Comments for “Study: Proliferation, Lack of Experience Req. May Be Hurting Certs”
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3/21/03: BetMen from USA says: |
Thanks AR from CA for your relieving post, and other similar posts as well, I feel better now. I just got my CIS bachelor degree and some certs including A-plus, CCNA, and MCSA and yet unemployed. I was freaked out when people started saying that college degree and certs are useless without experience. So wtf am I doing in the past 4 yrs of college and studying for those certs if everything just counts as simply worthless coz I don't have 5 yrs experience? If course I don't have and now I'm looking to have one. I studied each exam by using at least 3 books, the most being CCNA with 5 books and router simulator practice. Why not a home lab with real routers? Good question! Because I have no extra money after all that I spent for those exams prep and fees. Well I'd more than welcome those if someone would donate them to me but who would? Now what I need is a job because I'm out of college and need money to live and I don't want to rob a bank for that, so I can't afford fooling around helping others' labs for experience without making money at all. I'd love to if I'm loaded but I'm not. And if you thought I'm expecting a 5-digit salary? NO, far from that! I'd take a tech or help desk job for 20k a yr if any but too bad there's none up to now. Are my degree and certs still worthless after all that spent for them, my money and my time? Then why are there universities then? Should they just close down because the degrees that they provide are worthless despite tenth of thousands of dollars and sleepless nights preparing for exams that one has to spend and go thru to earn a degree, like me? |
3/21/03: Anonymous from Austin, Texas says: |
Finally I'm seeing some responses from those who recognize that the state of IT is changing. Certification may be a little less valuable now than it was several years ago but it still means something. It's clear to me that many of the early responses to the article came from people who are masking their concerns about their jobs with gasbag ego-strutting and elitism. This kind of attitude does no good and it belongs in he Dark Ages, not the modern world. Whether they like it or not, people who parade their battle scars will slowly but surely get pushed aside by those who remain humble and eager to learn NO MATTER HOW FAR THEY GO! I'm studying for certifications first as MCDBA, then I want to move on into solutions development. I've seen the "brain dumps" and I've used them as study guides. I've never thought of them as anything more than a way to find out what I already know. I'm aware of some horror stories about people who used the brain dumps to pass the exams and ended up getting fired because they really didn't know jack. These are tragic situations that, unfortunately cast a shadow on the whole certification process. I am taking classes, reading books and online tutorials and studying. In short, I'M WORKING; I'm NOT just trying to get a piece of paper to hang on my wall. I want to know my stuff. I also want hands-on experience and I'm not afraid to do "flunky" work as a means of getting my foot in the door. It's my sincere hope that, when I do get my first job in IT, the experienced people with whom I work will be open-minded, understanding and encouraging. I know we don't always get what we want but I think it makes sense for those who have experience to support and encourage those who do not. |
3/21/03: Anonymous from RI says: |
I agree with the last poster. If I were a hiring manager, I'd take a young, eager, educated person and mentor/train them over a grizzled old fart with an attitude problem and a god complex any day. |
3/23/03: Anonymous says: |
Does 4 year grads have any experience when they leave college? NO. so why pick on certs as if they are the be all of end all? |
3/23/03: Dazzed from ATL says: |
Scam, Scam, Scam, can you spell SCAM!!! It's who you know and @$% you kiss or owes you a favor. Yes you need certs and degrees but it's how you smooze... If you don't smooze well then you loose. Networking is the key...so take some courses that develope people skills and you can go a long way in IT or anything you choose. It's not the most certs or the most education. Get a PhD in smoozology and you are over the hump. That's my two cents. I know it sucks but it true... |
3/23/03: point and counterpoint from blehhhhh says: |
yeah and don't forget that it is good to get involved with good people in the long run too. associating with jerkoffs never gets anyone anywhere! |
3/23/03: BetMen from USA says: |
Do you think money comes that easy to get Masters degree or PhD huh? Or even a $2000 one week course? Well maybe for you...I worked and slaved my a$$ off so that I can pay off my college loan and spent a significant amount of money for certs and their preparations. I'm totally broke now and fully loaded with debt. If what I've done is just simply worthless, why tf have I and other people done it and spent such amount of money for something worthless??? Maybe universities should close down then oinstead of offering worthless degrees if you think so, heh? |
3/24/03: Anonymous says: |
Wow! Amazing! D'uh, this has been obvious since 1999. |
3/24/03: Anonymous says: |
But we need mo' money! |
3/24/03: William Gates from Washington says: |
Thomson-Prometric is out of touch with reality. Their test centers are screwed up and so is the management and operations of the whole damn company. Typical! They must be republicans because they haven't a clue, just want to make a buck. |
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