I probably should have provided a bit more context.

 

I���ve been ���in the industry��� since 1985 and I know just how little a piece of paper is ACTUALLY worth in relation to real experience. I���ve recently had a change of job title, and the new one has the N word in it. And although I have been doing network stuff off and on for decades, I���m on a learning curve. I���ve picked up a lot of info on the run, but I recognise that there are some gaps in my knowledge.

                                                                        

I���m looking for the most sensible path to fill those gaps, and ���I���m going for certs��� is one way to justify training expenditure.

 

I work for a company of 3000+ people located in various countries, and I���m the one global ���resource��� for our networks. I need to know a lot of stuff.

 

 

From: Chris O'Donoghue [mailto:chris@tasman.net]
Sent: Wednesday, 14 December 2016 5:05 p.m.
To: Lesley Longhurst <Lesley.Longhurst@opus.co.nz>
Cc: Nznog <nznog@list.waikato.ac.nz>
Subject: Re: [nznog] Certifications

 

I think it depends on your career track. 

 

If you intend being a network admin for a normal company then common certifications help. If you want to work with a network company it matters much less.

 

However, overseas, if you don't have a reputation, then certification will help. 

 

Chris 

 

On 14/12/2016 15:32, Lesley Longhurst <Lesley.Longhurst@opus.co.nz> wrote:

Hi all,

As an all-purpose leading network bod for my company, what���s a good certification strategy? I deal with a wide range of stuff from local LANs to international backbones, and it���s high time I got myself a piece of paper to ���prove��� that I know some stuff.

 

Is CCNA still a good starting point?

 

 

Lesley Longhurst

Opus International Consultants Ltd, 33 The Esplanade, Petone, Lower Hutt 5012, New Zealand

PO Box 30 845, Lower Hutt 5040, New Zealand

+64 4 471 7002    +64 21 244 3718    lesley.longhurst@opus.co.nz

www.opus.co.nz