CompTIA Network Plus Training In Your Own Home – News

by Jason Kendall on July 25, 2009

by Jason Kendall

Network and PC support workers are constantly sought after in Great Britain, as institutions become progressively more dependent on their technical advice and capacity to solve problems. The world’s desire for the above mentioned individuals is consistently on the grow, as industry becomes more and more dependent upon technology.

Technology and IT is one of the most exciting and ground-breaking industries you could be involved with. Being a member of a team working on breakthroughs in technology is to be a part of the massive changes affecting everyone who lives in the 21st century. It’s a common misapprehension that the increase in technology we have experienced is easing off. There is no truth in this at all. We have yet to experience incredible advances, and the internet in particular will be the most effective tool in our lives.

If making decent money is way up on your wish list, then you’ll welcome the news that the average salary of the majority of IT staff is much higher than with most other jobs or industries. It seems there’s a lot more room for IT jobs increases in the United Kingdom. The market sector continues to grow quickly, and we don’t have anywhere near enough qualified skilled IT professionals to fill current job vacancies, so it’s not likely that there’ll be any kind of easing off for years to come.

Students hoping to start an IT career usually have no idea of which route to follow, let alone what market to get certified in. I mean, if you have no know-how of IT in the workplace, how can you expect to know what any qualified IT worker fills their day with? Let alone arrive at which accreditation path is the most likely for a successful result. To work through this, a discussion is necessary, covering a number of definitive areas:

* The type of personality you have as well as your interests – which work-centred jobs you enjoy or dislike.

* Why you’re looking at stepping into Information Technology – it could be you’re looking to overcome a life-long goal like working from home maybe.

* What are your thoughts on travelling time and locality vs salary?

* With many, many different sectors to gain certifications for in computing – you’ll need to gain some background information on what differentiates them.

* Having a cold, hard look at the level of commitment, time and effort you can give.

To bypass the confusing industry jargon, and discover the best path to success, have a good talk with an experienced professional; someone who understands the commercial reality whilst covering the accreditations.

It’s essential to have an accredited exam preparation programme included in the package you choose. Steer clear of depending on non-official preparation materials for exams. Their phraseology is sometimes startlingly different – and this could lead to potential problems in the actual examination. Simulations and practice exams can be enormously valuable in helping you build your confidence – so that when you come to take your actual exams, you don’t get uptight.

Lately, do you find yourself questioning your job security? For the majority of us, this isn’t an issue until something goes wrong. However, the lesson often learned too late is that job security doesn’t really exist anymore, for most of us. However, a sector experiencing fast growth, where staff are in constant demand (because of a growing shortage of commercially certified people), creates the conditions for real job security.

Offering the computing industry for example, a recent e-Skills investigation highlighted massive skills shortages around the United Kingdom of around 26 percent. Basically, we can only fill just three out of every 4 jobs in IT. Well trained and commercially educated new professionals are correspondingly at a complete premium, and it’s estimated to remain so for much longer. Quite simply, acquiring professional IT skills during the years to come is likely the safest choice of careers you could make.

You’ll come across courses which guarantee examination passes – inevitably that means paying for the exams before you’ve even made a start on the course. But before you get taken in by the chance of a guarantee, consider this:

You’re paying 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. It’s everybody’s ambition to qualify on the first attempt. Taking your exams progressively one by one and funding them one at a time makes it far more likely you’ll pass first time – you prepare appropriately and think carefully about the costs.

Why should you pay a training college in advance for examination fees? Go for the best offer at the time, rather than pay marked up fees – and sit exams more locally – rather than in some remote place. Buying a course that includes payments for exam fees (which also includes interest if you’ve taken out a loan) is insane. Resist being talked into filling the training company’s account with extra money of yours simply to help their cash-flow! A lot bank on the fact that you don’t even take them all – then they’ll keep the extra money. You should fully understand that re-takes via organisations with an ‘Exam Guarantee’ are always heavily controlled. They will insist that you take pre-tests first until you’ve demonstrated an excellent ability to pass.

VUE and Prometric examinations are currently clocking in at an average of 112 pounds in this country. What’s the point of paying huge ‘Exam Guarantee’ costs (often hidden in the cost) – when good quality study materials, the proper support and study, commitment and preparing with good quality mock and practice exams is what will really guarantee success.

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