I want to be an IT professional
Justin
Atlanta
I'm ready to do it. I want to become an IT pro. I have determined that these are some of the things I should learn to be marketable:
UNix, Java, apache, red hat, linux, .net, c++, MCSE, mcsa,
cisco, MCSE+I, MCT, MCSS, MCSST, CCA, CCI, CNE, CNI, CNS, CIP,
CCNA, A+, Network+ and i-Net+.
So..... Where do I start? I want to do this through correspndence and online, and I would like to do this within some sort of budget. Please advise.
UNix, Java, apache, red hat, linux, .net, c++, MCSE, mcsa,
cisco, MCSE+I, MCT, MCSS, MCSST, CCA, CCI, CNE, CNI, CNS, CIP,
CCNA, A+, Network+ and i-Net+.
So..... Where do I start? I want to do this through correspndence and online, and I would like to do this within some sort of budget. Please advise.
0
Comments
I would pick something to focus on, and then let the rest come as you need it. Start off going towards your MCSE. That's gonna be marketable. Start off with 70-270 (Windows XP Professional) and get your MCP in that, and then go from there.
You've got lots of arenas in that "I want to learn" list... You should pick a focus - Networking, programming, database technologies, systems, etc... Forget what you THINK you should do - what do you WANT to do.. If it's something you enjoy, you'll excel at it. Some people are not cut out to be programmers but make great networking people, and some people are fantastic programmers but suck at systems. You get the idea.
http://www.careeracademy.com/careeracademy.com/iacademy.htm
Good Idea? Bad Idea? Am I even close?
You could also try one of the online college book sellers. Don't know the name, but there are e-vendors that specialize in college books.
For all three of those, courses and certs. I would say this:
First, Prime is right in a way, the skill sets are sets. If you are into Access, then you could learn Oracle-- but, having admin certs and Access DB certs will open some career doors for you in the meantime. If you are really more into home networking now, then you could pick up Cisco networking or learn Linux networking internals, or both.
Second-- Think about what you do best now and like most, build on that. Over the long haul, you might find yourself learning C++ to a degree, but that is a special mindset language to really use it to the full.
One thing I will say-- what is hyper-hot now will change later. Lots of folks starting out tend to hop on latest tihng, then when they get certified find lots of others had same idea. Make the first jump something you also enjoy, and build from that stepping stone. That's what I did, and I turned out to be somewhat of a jack of many IT trades, but that took 30 years plus.
John D.
http://www.safari.com/ is the cheapest place I know for online reading. They have lots of texts legally online-- they charge by month, give you a virtual bookshelf, and the publishers OK what they put online and get some money back from Safari in royalties. Then buy what grabs you most and what you understand most. I pay them about $15.00 a month, can have 10 books checked out at once virtually, go online and read anytime 24/7. They are an IT virtual library. They've been around more quietly for over a decade, and are becoming more popular among techs who need some out-of career core info or who want to explore IT.
http://www.bamm.com/ has a plethora of books, once books get slightly dated, they discount them about 37% on the web. If you are a Millionaire's Club member, which runs $10.00 per year, you get a further 10% off. And frequently, if you buy $50.00 of books in one order, they will also throw in free shipping. I have seen them also offer free shipping for orders over $25.00 from time to time.
This site is also known as BooksAMillion, and the web discounts, other than the 10%, do not tend to show up often in their stores in real time. Wildly, after shipping, I tend to save about 10-20% off the
BooksAMillion store prices at the local BooksAMillion near me. Web sales is a different division of BooksAMillion than the physical stores.
AFAIK, BooksAmillion is US only, sorry for those outside US.
John D.
KingFish
Then you should pick a specialty. Yeah you can be an all around it person but specialists make the money. Yeah lots of mcse's but not near as many exchange persons or other mail server ppl, Network security specialists make a butt load of cash. Specializing in something will make you more cash then being an all around.
Good Luck
Gobbles