If it weren’t for a constant influx of knowledgeable network and PC support personnel, business in the UK (and around the world) would surely grind to a halt. There is an ever growing requirement for people to support both the systems and the users themselves. Because we become massively more dependent on advanced technology, we simultaneously find ourselves increasingly dependent on the skilled and qualified networking professionals, who keep the systems going.
A lot of training providers will only provide basic 9am till 6pm support (maybe a little earlier or later on certain days); not many go late into the evening (after 8-9pm) or cover weekends properly.
Locate training schools with help available at any time you choose (even if it’s early hours on Sunday morning!) Make sure it’s always 24×7 direct access to mentors and instructors, and not simply some messaging service that means you’re parked in a queue of others waiting to be called back – probably during office hours.
The most successful trainers utilise several support facilities around the globe in several time-zones. They use an online interactive interface to join them all seamlessly, any time of the day or night, help is just seconds away, without any contact issues or hassle.
If you accept anything less than support round-the-clock, you’ll end up kicking yourself. It may be that you don’t use it late at night, but you’re bound to use weekends, late evenings or early mornings.
Make sure you don’t get caught-up, as can often be the case, on the training process. You’re not training for the sake of training; this is about employment. You need to remain focused on where you want to go.
It’s possible, in some situations, to get a great deal of enjoyment from a year of study and then find yourself trapped for decades in a tiresome job role, as a consequence of not performing the correct research at the beginning.
It’s well worth a long chat to see what industry will expect from you. Which precise exams they’ll want you to gain and in what way you can gain some industry experience. It’s also worth spending time thinking about how far you think you’ll want to progress your career as often it can force you to choose a particular set of exams.
We’d recommend you seek advice from a professional advisor before making your final decision on some particular study program, so there’s little doubt that the specific package will give the skill-set required for your career choice.
Locating job security these days is very unusual. Businesses can drop us from the workforce at a moment’s notice – whenever it suits.
We can however hit upon security at market-level, by digging for high demand areas, tied with work-skill shortages.
Investigating the computing sector, a recent e-Skills study showed a 26 percent skills deficit. Accordingly, for each 4 job positions in existence across Information Technology (IT), organisations are only able to find certified professionals for 3 of them.
This single reality on its own underpins why the United Kingdom urgently requires considerably more people to get into the industry.
Because the IT sector is evolving at such a rate, there really isn’t any other sector worth investigating as a retraining vehicle.
Commercial certification is now, very visibly, taking over from the more academic tracks into IT – why then has this come about?
With a growing demand for specific technological expertise, industry has moved to the specialised core-skills learning only available through the vendors themselves – in other words companies such as Adobe, Microsoft, CISCO and CompTIA. This usually turns out to involve less time and financial outlay.
Obviously, a necessary amount of background information needs to be learned, but precise specialised knowledge in the required areas gives a vendor educated student a real head start.
Just as the old advertisement said: ‘It does what it says on the tin’. Employers simply need to know where they have gaps, and then match up the appropriate exam numbers as a requirement. They’ll know then that all applicants can do what they need.
Copyright Scott Edwards. Hop over to Web Design Training or Careers-Advisor.co.uk/caradvk.html.
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