In the fast-paced world we live in, support workers who are qualified to fix PC’s and networks, along with giving daily advice to users, are essential in all areas of industry. Whereupon we’re all becoming progressively dependent on advanced technology, we simultaneously inevitably become increasingly dependent on the skilled and qualified network engineers, who maintain those systems.
Searching for your first position in IT can be a little easier with the help of a Job Placement Assistance facility. With the growing skills shortage in the UK today, it’s not necessary to make too much of this option though. It isn’t so complicated as you might think to get your first job once you’re trained and certified.
Help with your CV and interview techniques is sometimes offered (alternatively, check out one of our sites for help). Be sure to you work on your old CV straight away – don’t leave it till you pass the exams!
It can happen that you haven’t even passed your first exam when you will be offered your first junior support job; however this is not possible if interviewers don’t get sight of your CV.
Most often, a local IT focused employment agency (who will, of course, be keen to place you to receive their commission) is going to give you a better service than a sector of a centralised training facility. Also of course they should be familiar with the local industry and employment needs.
Certainly make sure you don’t put hundreds of hours of effort into your studies, then call a halt and leave it in the hands of the gods to sort out your employment. Get off your backside and get on with the job. Invest the same focus into landing your first job as you did to gain the skills.
Beginning from the idea that we need to find the market that sounds most inviting first, before we’re even able to contemplate what career development program ticks the right boxes, how can we choose the correct route?
I mean, if you’ve got no experience in the IT market, how are you equipped to know what someone in a particular field actually does day-to-day? Let alone arrive at which training route would be most appropriate for you to get there.
Deliberation over several factors is required when you want to expose the right answer for you:
* The sort of individual you consider yourself to be – the tasks that you enjoy doing, plus of course – what you definitely don’t enjoy.
* What is the time-frame for your training?
* What salary and timescale requirements you have?
* There are many areas to train for in IT – you’ll need to get a basic understanding of what separates them.
* Having a cold, hard look into the effort, commitment and time that you can put aside.
To cut through all the jargon and confusion, and discover what’ll really work for you, have a good talk with an experienced professional; someone who appreciates and can explain the commercial realities whilst covering the accreditations.
Always expect an authorised exam preparation system as part of your course package.
Students regularly can be thrown off course by trying to prepare themselves with questions that are not from authorised sources. It’s not uncommon that the phraseology is startlingly different and it’s vital that you know this.
Mock exams can be enormously valuable for confidence building – so that when you come to take your actual exams, you don’t get uptight.
Exam ‘guarantees’ are sometimes offered as part of a training package – this always means you have to pay for the exams at the start of your training. But before you get taken in by the chance of a guarantee, be aware of the facts:
You’ll pay for it by some means. You can be assured it’s not a freebie – it’s just been rolled into the price of the whole package.
People who take exams one at a time, paying as they go are far more likely to pass first time. They are conscious of what they’ve paid and take the necessary steps to be up to the task.
Shouldn’t you be looking to not pay up-front, but at the appropriate time, instead of paying a premium to the college, and also to sit exams more locally – instead of miles away at the college’s beck and call?
Including money in your training package for exam fees (and if you’re financing your study there’ll be interest on that) is insane. It’s not your job to boost the training company’s account with your hard-earned cash simply to help their cash-flow! A lot bank on the fact that you will never make it to exams – so they get to keep the extra funds.
Also, exam guarantees often have very little value. The majority of companies won’t pay again for an exam until you can prove to them you’re ready to pass.
With average Prometric and VUE examinations in the United Kingdom costing around 112 pounds, it makes sense to pay as you go. Why splash out often many hundreds of pounds extra at the beginning of your training? Consistent and systematic learning, coupled with quality exam simulation software is what will really see you through.
(C) 2009 – S. Edwards. Navigate to Click HERE or MCSA Course.