I am working in IT and some of my colleagues are talking about getting certifications for a particular domain within our field of work. These certifications are expensive and requires time and effort. So are they worth getting?
I have only ever bothered getting certifications if they were a job requirement or when I was looking to pad my resume before making a move.
Ask around, your company may have some kind of tuition assistance or vouchers to cover exam fees for relevant certs.
Ask around, your company may have some kind of tuition assistance or vouchers to cover exam fees for relevant certs.
Whenever possible take advantage of your company’s continuing education budget. Get relevant certs, take university extension classes, buy study materials and books, etc.
Always
Yes, for mainly 2 reasons:
- it shows your employer that you are willing to learn and grow (and they could even pay for it)
- it adds value to your CV in case you want to leave
It’s hard to find more compact correctness than this comment right here.
In my experience? If you are going to do the formal classes and work that lines up with a certificate, might as well do all of it and get it. It can’t hurt.
At the same time, there is no real reason a cert is better than experience. It’s more of easy proof of the date that you learned the technology, so it stuff has changed it’s easy to show you the new stuff.
Government contracts will often require certain certifications.
Ask your company to pay for the certs. At best you get free certs and can then leave them and make more money somewhere. At worst they say no.
Going from zero certs to getting my Sec+ landed me a better job with a new company and nearly doubled my income. (Cloud architecture engineer). Can’t speak to any other certs.
In my opinion the actual cert is not worth pursuing unless you’re trying to negotiate a promotion or find a new job.
Now if your employer is willing to pay for it great. (But I stopped paying for such things out of my own pocket.)
But the knowledge is what’s valuable. You can study nearly anything in the IT field for free.
I would do a search for job listings that would be the jobs you would be applying for if you chose to leave your job or were laid off. Do the job descriptions list the certifications you are thinking about getting? If so, it might be worth pursuing, especially if you can get your current employer to pay for it.
For example, almost every project manager job lists PMP certification. If you are currently a PM and don’t have it, you might want it just in case you get laid off to improve your chances of getting a new job. Otherwise, you might be up against 10 other candidates with just as much experience, but 3 of them have a cert and you don’t even get a screening interview.
Absolutely worth it.
During your next review cycle hey boss I improved my education I’m now n-certified. I’d like to be considered for a promotion where I can better use my new skills.
Between the lines: You’re either going to give me a bump in salary or position or I’m now more marketable than I was and I may just leave.
And on the upside, if you do leave you are now worth more money.
Expensive certifications that your employer will reimburse you for that potentially increase your earnings potential and value in the job market if you do change employers? Are those worth getting? Yes. Employer not paying you for them? Still, maybe yes. Do you really need to ask? Or are you looking for an excuse to not do the thing recommended by your mentors and that’s not giving you instant gratification and a dopamine hit (like this place does)?
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This isn’t the place to ask. Go figure out if your industry cares about these certifications. I am a software engineer certified in nothing and I’ve never been asked about them. Pretty sure it’s the opposite for IT/infrastructure type roles, but again, you’re just gonna get anecdotes here and not really accurate information.
You don’t get asked for them - companies pick someone with the cert before you and you will never know. :)
Depends on the role. Certs are basically just a marginal improvement with some but not all companies automated screening of your resume.
I do lots of interviews and could not care less about certs. They are not a reliable indicator of capability or talent.