If you get the certifications the right way and actually learn the material, do labs etc then having alot of certifications isn’t a bad thing, it expands your knowledge more.
Good luck memorising questions for comptia exams, 80-90% of them aren't like anything from the practice exams. For me practice exams helped me a lot, I could get a feel for the actual exam and what I need to work on more. I'm probably subjective because I wouldnt do just the practice exams without actually put in the learning and practice but I can see how some people will go about and try that.
Really glad I stayed subbed to this channel. I subbed my junior year of uni while panicking to pass Networking.I don't watch every video, but I always know the knowledge is right here. Thanks for all the helpful advice
Honestly, I feel like making one of these channels myself... I subscribed to this channel 3 years ago. I was a manager at the ups store...making 45k, 3 years later, I made it. I did exactly what this channel said to do, and I made it.
I’ve met people like that in my IT career they don’t last cause most of these people that memorize the test or extremely book smart have like this robotistic one direction mine set and aren’t loss can’t troubleshoot or figure out things on their own. Even the interviews sound very hollow and manufactured.
Lots of folks get caught up in how to start, I'd say just start. Tinker with things in your free time. I would recommend >A+>Grab a call center job to display help desk like skills>get security+>try to get into any entry level desktop support/field tech/help desk/>try to get a network+ or the new entry level cisco cert>after that decide to specialize>security/servers/networks/programming/data science, etc. But try to have a goal in mind or you'll end up just being in help desk forever. But a willingness to learn, take on projects, trumps degrees and certs overall. It's the thinking to lock down rather then just passing tests. And social skills are a muuuuuch bigger part then folks realize.
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Are you still going live? I took a half day for this live..
If you get the certifications the right way and actually learn the material, do labs etc then having alot of certifications isn’t a bad thing, it expands your knowledge more.
But just do not have too many. Just have the important ones the ones that the recruiter will be looking at
Good luck memorising questions for comptia exams, 80-90% of them aren't like anything from the practice exams. For me practice exams helped me a lot, I could get a feel for the actual exam and what I need to work on more. I'm probably subjective because I wouldnt do just the practice exams without actually put in the learning and practice but I can see how some people will go about and try that.
Really glad I stayed subbed to this channel. I subbed my junior year of uni while panicking to pass Networking.I don't watch every video, but I always know the knowledge is right here. Thanks for all the helpful advice
Honestly, I feel like making one of these channels myself... I subscribed to this channel 3 years ago. I was a manager at the ups store...making 45k, 3 years later, I made it. I did exactly what this channel said to do, and I made it.
Hell yes!!! F*ck traditional and normal.
I’ve met people like that in my IT career they don’t last cause most of these people that memorize the test or extremely book smart have like this robotistic one direction mine set and aren’t loss can’t troubleshoot or figure out things on their own. Even the interviews sound very hollow and manufactured.
Jorge what happen to your live amigo? Im waiting it was cut short?
Yes, light went off. I will do at 10pm central tonight.
@@NetworkEngineerAcademy thanks bro. I was waiting in the dark here for a while.
@@NetworkEngineerAcademy waiting for your 10pm live jorge
I will like to learn cybersecurity. Should I learn IT first and certification if so which IT certificate? I'm a newbie to all this..
Lots of folks get caught up in how to start, I'd say just start. Tinker with things in your free time. I would recommend >A+>Grab a call center job to display help desk like skills>get security+>try to get into any entry level desktop support/field tech/help desk/>try to get a network+ or the new entry level cisco cert>after that decide to specialize>security/servers/networks/programming/data science, etc.
But try to have a goal in mind or you'll end up just being in help desk forever. But a willingness to learn, take on projects, trumps degrees and certs overall. It's the thinking to lock down rather then just passing tests. And social skills are a muuuuuch bigger part then folks realize.