i think ang purpose sa mga companies nga mo hire sila ug "certified"
IT people kay para
"humot" ang ilang baho... =) para man gud na maka ingon sila "all our
programmers are
java certified"... so bagting dayon ang mga dalungan sa mga "business"
people... murag. it's a way to market the company... murag lang. =)

On 10/9/06, hard wyrd <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I just read this article
http://www.networkworld.com/you/2006/072406-you-salary.html?page=1
. I am particularly captivated by the increasing base salaries being offered
for tech people, specially in the US.

I also noticed a certain portion in the article mentioning a survey result,
found on page 2 that says and I quote:
>
>
> Certifications had even less of an effect. This year's survey, like the
data from the previous five years, finds that certifications have no
positive effect on compensation. Respondents with no certificates reported
more promotions and greater earnings than those with two or more
certifications. In 2006, network professionals with no certifications report
average base pay of $81,710, while those with two or more certifications
earned $77,270.
>
> Network executives say certifications do not contribute to promotions or
to base pay, because they are an ineffectual method of evaluating and
rewarding employees. Vendors offer such an enormous range of certifications,
many of them easy to achieve, that the value of the certification process
has been watered down. Likewise, certifications do not prove real-world
skill.
>
> "Certificates are not particularly important," says Barrett, a Microsoft
Certified Systems Engineer. "The biggest benefit is in dealing with outside
regulators. It basically shows I know what I'm doing. A cert shows at least
you know enough to pass the test. But [when hiring or promoting], we look at
experience, customer service and skills," he says.
>
> The hottest skills, network executives agree, are security, telephony,
wireless, remote access, routing, and LAN/WAN design and management. "I tend
to steer people toward the LAN and networking side. You don't worry about
outsourcing. Companies are always going to need someone here looking after
the LAN and network," Barrett says. "The standards will always be there, too
- basic admin of a Windows network. Is it hot? No, but it is always going to
be needed."
 If you want to work in the US, EU or other country, perhaps you might want
to rethink about taking that certification? One thing I noticed also is a
lot of job openings in the Philippines and Asia-Pacific region that are very
much particular about hiring personnel with certifications. I'm sure hell am
not certified by a "vendor", but I sure can make the job done... :).

But then again, shouldn't you want to pursue that increasing salary abroad?
:)

--
"A dog that has no bite, barks loudest."
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Registered Linux User #400165
'nuff said...
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