Nice video. Whoever trying to start learning CCNA should watch this video. I've been a Systems admin, but never had very good networking skills. I was more of servers and client devices guy. I've done minor routing work, but never setup routers or firewalls from scratch. When I get a CCNA certificate, then I want to be more focused on networking work than server related work. Lots of things can be clouded out, but most companies still needs much work on networking devices.
Thanks for your comment Joe! Appreciate it. We'll be giving away 100 Expert Instructor-led IT Certification courses soon, so keep an eye out for that video.
It puzzles me on what you wrote. You have been a systems admin and never had good networking skills. i have meet so called network engineers that do not know jack shit about networking or cabling. so how is it that there are these individuals at a high tier position and do not know certain fundamentals ?????
im a 18 year old computer technician (&) in college for networking/ and fell in love with networking!! and came here for tips to studying and preparing!!
I have my CompTIA A+ back in January this year, I'm applying for remote desktop support jobs and also studying for the CCNA for my technical certificate program at the community college.
I wish Cisco would combine things with certification and courses. I really think the old CCNP let many people off of the hook forgetting basic things about console and VTY lines, so re-taking the CCNA or taking a course for CCNA or perhaps just in the areas that don't overlap with the CCNP is appropriate. Instead, they have added these CCNA topics into the CCNP certification which I think is a big mistake.
@@browntroy101 You're welcome. All the best. Keep your eyes on our Channel, we're going to be giving away 100 FREE Expert Instructor-led Certification Courses very soon. Network+ and CCNA will be included.
CCNA is very difficult, I only got a CCNA cert from a community college, but didn't do the industry exam. My credential is basically useless without passing the test. I don't know why I got into it to begin with, It's not something I particularly enjoy..I honestly don't even understand a thing about it. It's too lengthy, cumbersome and confusing..
@@zackxmagz6343 Just a dead end sales job, it's fulltime. I can't concentrate in uni so cannot go back for an undergrad to help with my credentials and to accelerate my career.
I am a last year bachelor student in IT and information systems. I am planning to take a master degree in cybersecurity, but would like to get started beforehand. How relevant is this certificate for learning the basics of networking and get a general idea on how the Internet flow works. Do you also have any recommendations for courses or topics to learn before getting starte with cybersecurity? Thanks in advance.
Hi Otuoze, Excellent question. After CCNA your best option would be to look for a job or gain some experience. While doing that you might want to pursue your CCNP. Hope that helps!
, is the CCNA syllabus upgraded after 12 months? I want to learn CCNA now but I will do the job after 3 years (after completing BSc). What should I do at this moment? Please let me know
Hi. I have my CompTIA A+, Net+, and Sec+, currently working as a PC tech. Am I in a good place to start prepping for CCNA? Any thoughts are appreciated.
Hey bud, similar position to you. I'd definitely start with CCNA if you're interested in moving towards specifically networking. I got tons of experience of learning networking more so from Packet Tracer and labs, which was highly applicable to the job I did afterwards as a Network Admin/Network Engineer. I learned more from doing Practical Exams. I have the CompTIA Trifecta like you, but I hated Sec+ and Net+. A+ was easy because you can practice a lot of the study material. It's harder with Net+ and Sec+ because it's highly theorem based. I'd recommend doing CCNA mostly through labs in Packet Tracer. I'm a hands on learner, and the transition from Packet Tracer and CCNA to my next job was 95% applicable as a network engineer. Everything I learned was very applicable and the transition from "just learning" to the job itself was seamless except for one thing; layer one concepts (physical layer). In packet tracer, the physical layer is perfect. Meaning you'll never have to plug and unplug cables, reboot times are almost instantaneous, once you connect one device to another it's immediately recognized. When I did my real job I initially spent a good amount of time troubleshooting on the network devices instead doing something as simple as restarting a laptop or computer, plugging and unplugging cables, etc. Packet tracer doesn't present those issues (they can be simulated if you really wanna go outta the way lol), but yeah, you get the idea. There's been a lot of vids as to why CCNA isn't worth it, and to some level it's true, and it all boils to this: if you wanna focus on cloud or cybersecurity or software, CCNA is a good place to start for fundamentals. But there are better certs than CCNA for cybersecurity/cloud. If you love networking, like topologies, designing, you're a hardware person, programming routers and switches, it's a ton of fun and CCNA is definitely worth it. Just spend as much time as possible in packet tracer; I can't stress that enough. It's EQUIVALENT to on the job training. For funsies, I'll throw in this; I hate the CompTIA certs. Like a ton. I only passed them because I learned how to study for CompTIA exams, and I learned how to test for CompTIA exams. CCNA is really good if you want something practical. I will say though CompTIA does make good material, but personally, I didn't understand any of it and just memorized a ton of terms and concepts. I only started understanding it when I did CCNA because you can directly apply what you're taught and see the results with your own eyes. Lengthy answer but I hope it helps. I started off as a humble PC tech like you when I was 16 and got CompTIA's IT Fundamentals, A+, and Net+. Moved my way up to Sec+, got tired of CompTIA, and sought something more practical. Got CCNA, instantly moved to a position as Network Admin and within a year I was a Network Engineer. I'm not discounting CompTIA; it's a sought after industry standard certification and it looks AWESOME on a resume. But if you're like me where theory just isn't tangible to you, you want something you can really see, and you ENJOY making networks, CCNA is definitely the place to go.
Also, come back to this comment when you've landed a job as a Network Administrator/Engineer in an enterprise environment. An employee from another section tells you their connection isn't working. If they've done NO troubleshooting (they haven't unplugged and replug their cable, restarted their computer, etc) and you're too lazy to walk over to their workstation, check your logging console to see if they've been connecting and disconnecting frequently. If they are, SSH into their switch then do a quick shut>no shut on their port. That fixed a ton of issues for me and took me almost a year to realize I could just do that LOL.
Some other tips if you wanna get good at being a network engineer and learn from my growing pains: learn to isolate issues, and work small then move up. Is one computer having an issue, or is it the entire network? Is it the port configuration, or is the issue present throughout the subnet? The VLAN? Or the entire network? When did the issue arise, and what changes have been made around the time the time issues were presented? Can you simply move a cable to another port, or do you have to change the rotuing configurations? Always assume user error first. Changing a configuration on a router or switch can change the network for the entire network. A small problem will become a much large scale one. What else has the user done? What has the user changed since the issue started happening? Did they download something? Change a configuration even if they weren't supposed to (important for static vs DHCP routing)? Can you fix it in their computer first before touching the network configurations? Keep a good log of EVERY change you make in the router, and make on echange at a time. After engineering a network, fielding it, then changing small things (it's rarely perfect the first time it's configured then connecting several devices presents some issues so don't get discouraged when this happens; packet tracer is very good at being a perfect environment), I save the running configuration to a text file on a disc or USB labeled properly with the DATE on it for back up purposes. I'd keep a logbook that's date and timestamped with every issue that happens; afterwards, I'd try one solution, give it a few minutes, and revert if it didn't work. I'd write it down in my logbook with what I tried, what failed, and when I changed it back. Change one thing at a time, and if it doesn't work, change it back. Once I found the solution, I'd immediately save it and write it down, and export the configs to a backup disc/USB. Get in the habit of typing write mem/copy run start after every few lines of configs. I've had buddies who really SUCKED at saving configs. They could solve an issue, but if they had to restart for whatever reason, all the configs would revert to the last save. People forget to save configs because routers and switches are meant to run 24/7. Idk how old you are, but it's like when you had a video game on your PS2 but you didn't have a memory card yet so you let it run 24/7. Then your parents turned it off and all your progress would be lost LMAO
So I have an honest question. I am 56 yrs old I have to do a career change because of health issues. If I get the CCNA Certification am I going to be able to get a job at my age?
The beginner "trifecta" is the Comptia A+, Comptia Network+, and Comptia security+ certifications. For CCNA, it is recommended you complete the A+ and Network+ exams first. Hands-on experience with actual hardware and networking will be very valuable for both learning the exam material and getting a job. For the Comptia exams however, it is not strictly necessary. The CCNA is a slightly more advanced certification, and it is recommended that you have some on-the-job experience before taking it.
I’m looking to get the IT certificate from Google to get the basics of IT down first. Would you recommend going for the CCNA certificate right after? And are there any better alternatives than Google’s IT certificate for people that have no previous knowledge and is it even necessary in your opinion?
The girl said it herself, "The CCNA will not directly lead to any employment offers". You know what will? A nice portfolio project. All that time you would spend with your nose in some dense textbook may as well be spent learning the concepts with a goal in mind that directly correlates to your success in finding a job. Between two job candidates, one with a CCNA and one with a nice looking or at least interesting portfolio that gets a 100% google lighthouse score, the latter will get the job without much consideration.. Do not waste your money on a proprietary certification unless you have that time and money to burn. This goes for any and all certifications. They mean nothing more than a minimal qualification to overgrown corporate machines, and absolutely nothing to everyone else.
Hi Collin, Thanks for your comment. In our experience we've found it beneficial to have both IT certifications and experience. Without experience, IT certifications get you a foot in the door.
People who come to America and get those 100k jobs go straight to CCNA and higher. I dont see them doing anything COMPTIA AT ALL.. yea you are in the comments promoting COMPTIA. Show me a sponsored worker for India, Pakistan or ASIA with a COMPTIA CERT.. you wont find it. Dont push people to COMPTIA.
Thanks for your comment Tracking The Market. The data clearly shows, and we know many IT professionals, who have built a very successful IT career on the foundation of CompTIA certs.
Hi frosty, Thanks for your comment. CCNA can go a long way in helping you get a job, but without experience you have to learn to interview well. Hope that helps.
I just passed the CCNA exam this morning...
any updates?
@@mellje4254 What updates do you mean? It was my first time to take that exam....
Congratulations Michael!
@@Michael-yl9rl no I meant have u started applying for jobs my friend, and was the exam hard?
Update please
Nice video. Whoever trying to start learning CCNA should watch this video.
I've been a Systems admin, but never had very good networking skills. I was more of servers and client devices guy. I've done minor routing work, but never setup routers or firewalls from scratch. When I get a CCNA certificate, then I want to be more focused on networking work than server related work. Lots of things can be clouded out, but most companies still needs much work on networking devices.
Thanks for your comment Joe! Appreciate it.
We'll be giving away 100 Expert Instructor-led IT Certification courses soon, so keep an eye out for that video.
It puzzles me on what you wrote. You have been a systems admin and never had good networking skills.
i have meet so called network engineers that do not know jack shit about networking or cabling.
so how is it that there are these individuals at a high tier position and do not know certain fundamentals ?????
plenty of thanx, you realy explained everything someone needs to know, I'm curently preparing for getting my ccna cert, and you gave me a plus push
That's awesome Moses. Happy to help!
How long it took you to study?
im a 18 year old computer technician (&) in college for networking/ and fell in love with networking!! and came here for tips to studying and preparing!!
Hi iknowtray,
Thanks for your comment.
All the best with your Networking career!
Did you appear for CCNA?
@@CaptianKuvira Yep passed the CCNA Saturday!
@@trayjobe6995 any tips ?
Yes I'm decide to do CCNA certification
That's great Praveen. All the best with your CCNA exam.
You actually outlined my general plan almost verbatim, glad to know I'm on the right path
That great Cbrinz. All the best with your CCNA exam!
I'm already familiar with the CCNA and to me , this is the video every beginner should be watching
Thanks for that feedback Jay! Appreciate it.👍
I have my CompTIA A+ back in January this year, I'm applying for remote desktop support jobs and also studying for the CCNA for my technical certificate program at the community college.
One of the best channels! Keep going !
Thanks Mr. DIYer!
You know that you are a Techy when you get excited about network concepts😂😁
So true :)
I’m from South Africa and I’m going to start my CCNA certificate around January 2023
I wish Cisco would combine things with certification and courses. I really think the old CCNP let many people off of the hook forgetting basic things about console and VTY lines, so re-taking the CCNA or taking a course for CCNA or perhaps just in the areas that don't overlap with the CCNP is appropriate. Instead, they have added these CCNA topics into the CCNP certification which I think is a big mistake.
Thinking about it. Torn between this cert and network +.
Hi Country Fried Vegan,
You might want to consider doing them both. Network+ builds a foundation for CCNA.
Hope that helps.
@@SkillsBuildTraining thanks!
@@browntroy101 You're welcome. All the best.
Keep your eyes on our Channel, we're going to be giving away 100 FREE Expert Instructor-led Certification Courses very soon. Network+ and CCNA will be included.
I'm looking at making a career change to try and work in data centers. Where would be a good place to start?
Hi D VR,
You'll want to take the following path:
CompTIA A+ *->* CompTIA Network+ *->* CompTIA Server+
I’m going to started
All the best with your CCNA certification Alliance.
Thanks for the overview. I look forward to working with cybersecurity
You're welcome John. Best of luck!
Thinking about it
That's great N Har. Let us know what you decide.
Thank you so much for the great video!
You are awesome, thinking to start don’t know where to start from. Need career change. Lost my business😞
Thanks for your question Plamen.
Your first place to start might be here: ua-cam.com/video/77lYVaqBTxY/v-deo.html&lc=Ugz-bfqW7q0xQvCC4aF4AaABAg
Hello, i am an Electrical technician and i developed love for networking please advise on how i can best start this
CompTIA Nework+ -> CCNA -> CCNP
is it possible to work as "field service engineer"? no homeoffice, no office, I dislike that
I'm thinking about it
Sounds good Korede.
son, she dropping jewels on us. I bookmarked every link. LEZDUIT!
Thanks for that feedback!
CCNA is very difficult, I only got a CCNA cert from a community college, but didn't do the industry exam. My credential is basically useless without passing the test. I don't know why I got into it to begin with, It's not something I particularly enjoy..I honestly don't even understand a thing about it. It's too lengthy, cumbersome and confusing..
Thanks for your comment Debra.
What are you doing now?
@@zackxmagz6343 Just a dead end sales job, it's fulltime. I can't concentrate in uni so cannot go back for an undergrad to help with my credentials and to accelerate my career.
You should read the comments of users because I can't read on my phone it is small screen. This is like a podcast for me
Noted. Thanks for that feedback blackspitit.
yes am interested
All the best!
Which practice test do you recommend getting for best material for reviews?
You might want to check these out DJ www.boson.com/practice-exam/200-301-cisco-ccna-practice-exam
i want to watch ccna tutorials by her ~
Thanks for the feedback!
Yes!
That's great Devin K! All the best with your CCNA exam.
I am a last year bachelor student in IT and information systems. I am planning to take a master degree in cybersecurity, but would like to get started beforehand. How relevant is this certificate for learning the basics of networking and get a general idea on how the Internet flow works. Do you also have any recommendations for courses or topics to learn before getting starte with cybersecurity?
Thanks in advance.
just started my entry level database admin job. With this experience plus a ccna certification will i be able to get a good networking job ?
Yes
Thanks for your comment Oluwasegun.
All the best with your CCNA exam!
I have already decided 😊
That's great Abhishek.
All the best with your CCNA exam!
Hii is there any growth for ccna voice and collaboration
can ccna make career n scope plz say
Hi Ganesh,
Yes, you can develop a lucrative Networking career by getting the CCNA.
I am studying for new CCNA exam for over an year, but it is difficult. Is there a CCNA community?
Might want to check this out Hyun www.reddit.com/r/ccna/
I just started studying for my CCNA, any advice?
After ccna what else? Get a job or add another cert(like Maybe devnet associate)?
And what if you don't get a job?
Hi Otuoze,
Excellent question.
After CCNA your best option would be to look for a job or gain some experience. While doing that you might want to pursue your CCNP.
Hope that helps!
, is the CCNA syllabus upgraded after 12 months? I want to learn CCNA now but I will do the job after 3 years (after completing BSc). What should I do at this moment? Please let me know
Hi Riad,
Thanks for your question.
The CCNA is updated approximately every 3 years.
Hope that helps.
I have done ccna & ccnp can I expect jobs on ccna
@@sandeepabbadi1577 That depends on how much experience you have, your CV, and your job searching and interview skills.
Why exam fee so high for ccna
Perfect answer Demonwater.
@@SkillsBuildTraining What if you fail? Is that fee until you pass?
YES
That's awesome Value Trading. All the best with your CCNA certification!
Hi. I have my CompTIA A+, Net+, and Sec+, currently working as a PC tech. Am I in a good place to start prepping for CCNA? Any thoughts are appreciated.
Hey bud, similar position to you. I'd definitely start with CCNA if you're interested in moving towards specifically networking. I got tons of experience of learning networking more so from Packet Tracer and labs, which was highly applicable to the job I did afterwards as a Network Admin/Network Engineer. I learned more from doing Practical Exams. I have the CompTIA Trifecta like you, but I hated Sec+ and Net+. A+ was easy because you can practice a lot of the study material. It's harder with Net+ and Sec+ because it's highly theorem based.
I'd recommend doing CCNA mostly through labs in Packet Tracer. I'm a hands on learner, and the transition from Packet Tracer and CCNA to my next job was 95% applicable as a network engineer. Everything I learned was very applicable and the transition from "just learning" to the job itself was seamless except for one thing; layer one concepts (physical layer). In packet tracer, the physical layer is perfect. Meaning you'll never have to plug and unplug cables, reboot times are almost instantaneous, once you connect one device to another it's immediately recognized. When I did my real job I initially spent a good amount of time troubleshooting on the network devices instead doing something as simple as restarting a laptop or computer, plugging and unplugging cables, etc. Packet tracer doesn't present those issues (they can be simulated if you really wanna go outta the way lol), but yeah, you get the idea.
There's been a lot of vids as to why CCNA isn't worth it, and to some level it's true, and it all boils to this: if you wanna focus on cloud or cybersecurity or software, CCNA is a good place to start for fundamentals. But there are better certs than CCNA for cybersecurity/cloud.
If you love networking, like topologies, designing, you're a hardware person, programming routers and switches, it's a ton of fun and CCNA is definitely worth it. Just spend as much time as possible in packet tracer; I can't stress that enough. It's EQUIVALENT to on the job training.
For funsies, I'll throw in this; I hate the CompTIA certs. Like a ton. I only passed them because I learned how to study for CompTIA exams, and I learned how to test for CompTIA exams. CCNA is really good if you want something practical. I will say though CompTIA does make good material, but personally, I didn't understand any of it and just memorized a ton of terms and concepts. I only started understanding it when I did CCNA because you can directly apply what you're taught and see the results with your own eyes.
Lengthy answer but I hope it helps. I started off as a humble PC tech like you when I was 16 and got CompTIA's IT Fundamentals, A+, and Net+. Moved my way up to Sec+, got tired of CompTIA, and sought something more practical. Got CCNA, instantly moved to a position as Network Admin and within a year I was a Network Engineer. I'm not discounting CompTIA; it's a sought after industry standard certification and it looks AWESOME on a resume. But if you're like me where theory just isn't tangible to you, you want something you can really see, and you ENJOY making networks, CCNA is definitely the place to go.
Also, come back to this comment when you've landed a job as a Network Administrator/Engineer in an enterprise environment.
An employee from another section tells you their connection isn't working. If they've done NO troubleshooting (they haven't unplugged and replug their cable, restarted their computer, etc) and you're too lazy to walk over to their workstation, check your logging console to see if they've been connecting and disconnecting frequently. If they are, SSH into their switch then do a quick shut>no shut on their port. That fixed a ton of issues for me and took me almost a year to realize I could just do that LOL.
Some other tips if you wanna get good at being a network engineer and learn from my growing pains: learn to isolate issues, and work small then move up.
Is one computer having an issue, or is it the entire network? Is it the port configuration, or is the issue present throughout the subnet? The VLAN? Or the entire network? When did the issue arise, and what changes have been made around the time the time issues were presented? Can you simply move a cable to another port, or do you have to change the rotuing configurations?
Always assume user error first. Changing a configuration on a router or switch can change the network for the entire network. A small problem will become a much large scale one. What else has the user done? What has the user changed since the issue started happening? Did they download something? Change a configuration even if they weren't supposed to (important for static vs DHCP routing)? Can you fix it in their computer first before touching the network configurations?
Keep a good log of EVERY change you make in the router, and make on echange at a time. After engineering a network, fielding it, then changing small things (it's rarely perfect the first time it's configured then connecting several devices presents some issues so don't get discouraged when this happens; packet tracer is very good at being a perfect environment), I save the running configuration to a text file on a disc or USB labeled properly with the DATE on it for back up purposes. I'd keep a logbook that's date and timestamped with every issue that happens; afterwards, I'd try one solution, give it a few minutes, and revert if it didn't work. I'd write it down in my logbook with what I tried, what failed, and when I changed it back. Change one thing at a time, and if it doesn't work, change it back. Once I found the solution, I'd immediately save it and write it down, and export the configs to a backup disc/USB.
Get in the habit of typing write mem/copy run start after every few lines of configs. I've had buddies who really SUCKED at saving configs. They could solve an issue, but if they had to restart for whatever reason, all the configs would revert to the last save. People forget to save configs because routers and switches are meant to run 24/7. Idk how old you are, but it's like when you had a video game on your PS2 but you didn't have a memory card yet so you let it run 24/7. Then your parents turned it off and all your progress would be lost LMAO
Awesome pointers dude!!!
So I have an honest question. I am 56 yrs old I have to do a career change because of health issues. If I get the CCNA Certification am I going to be able to get a job at my age?
Hi Jared,
Do you have any other IT certifications? If not, it's recommended that you start with the CompTIA A+.
Don’t let age be a barrier, go for it.
Join Reddit groups and use google, Google helps you a lot with any questions you have
is STP included in the CCNA exam?
Hi arontigerful,
Have you checked the CCNA exam objectives?
@@SkillsBuildTraining Yes I checked it now, STP is part of CCNA exam, thank you though
Thx for making this video
You're welcome Juan. Glad you enjoyed it!
yes!!!!!!!!
Great! All the best with your CCNA certification Jimeat.
Where can I take the exam?
Here you go Henry:
home.pearsonvue.com/cisco.aspx
I am beginner level in computer.
How will i start?
Which basic needs to do ccna?
At first Hardware or others?
Please let me know
The beginner "trifecta" is the Comptia A+, Comptia Network+, and Comptia security+ certifications. For CCNA, it is recommended you complete the A+ and Network+ exams first. Hands-on experience with actual hardware and networking will be very valuable for both learning the exam material and getting a job. For the Comptia exams however, it is not strictly necessary. The CCNA is a slightly more advanced certification, and it is recommended that you have some on-the-job experience before taking it.
yes!
That's great Iconlab. All the best with your certification exam.
I’m looking to get the IT certificate from Google to get the basics of IT down first. Would you recommend going for the CCNA certificate right after? And are there any better alternatives than Google’s IT certificate for people that have no previous knowledge and is it even necessary in your opinion?
Hi Mauricio,
We'd recommend getting the CompTIA A+ first. Then Network+, then CCNA. In that order.
Hope that helps.
Hey.... Mind if I ask what route you took eventually?
how long does ccna certification take?
Hi Ian,
That really depends on how much time you commit to studying and exam preparation.
Hope that helps.
@@SkillsBuildTraining so you get the study guide and can sign up for the test whenever?
@@iantansey1601 Yes, correct.
Which is a better combo certification to work from home in IT? 1)CEH W/Splunk 2)CCNA W/CCNP or 3) CySA+ W/CEH
The girl said it herself, "The CCNA will not directly lead to any employment offers". You know what will? A nice portfolio project. All that time you would spend with your nose in some dense textbook may as well be spent learning the concepts with a goal in mind that directly correlates to your success in finding a job. Between two job candidates, one with a CCNA and one with a nice looking or at least interesting portfolio that gets a 100% google lighthouse score, the latter will get the job without much consideration.. Do not waste your money on a proprietary certification unless you have that time and money to burn. This goes for any and all certifications. They mean nothing more than a minimal qualification to overgrown corporate machines, and absolutely nothing to everyone else.
Hi Collin,
Thanks for your comment.
In our experience we've found it beneficial to have both IT certifications and experience.
Without experience, IT certifications get you a foot in the door.
Certifications deffs give you a good overview , and a goal to Gain knowledge in the process. A portfilio and Cert would be IDeal.
@@danielxbox28 Well said Dman.
I did my diploma can I get job in CCNA
CCNA is a certification not a job.
Is Ccna is a field job??
Hi Manoj,
It's usually not a field job, but it depends on the company you ultimately work for.
Hope that helps.
People who come to America and get those 100k jobs go straight to CCNA and higher. I dont see them doing anything COMPTIA AT ALL.. yea you are in the comments promoting COMPTIA. Show me a sponsored worker for India, Pakistan or ASIA with a COMPTIA CERT.. you wont find it. Dont push people to COMPTIA.
Thanks for your comment Tracking The Market.
The data clearly shows, and we know many IT professionals, who have built a very successful IT career on the foundation of CompTIA certs.
so the certification will cost $300?
You can find your answer here ricky...
www.vue.com/vouchers/pricelist/cisco.asp
Thank you the information kind ma'am
You're welcome Faisal.
Having passed multiple CCNAs I can say it wasn't worth it.
why do you think so?
oh man im sorry you had to study for all those. i have no idea how it used to be. are you saying all of those together makes up the CCNA now?
thank you! you are so cute btw
Thanks!
Note: the official cert guide only provides 70% off of the online practice exams and course material, it does not grant you immediate access.
Thanks for your comment Norsie.
but she already mention it, without real world practice CCNA cannot help you much get a Job. The main problem is how to get that experience???
Hi frosty,
Thanks for your comment.
CCNA can go a long way in helping you get a job, but without experience you have to learn to interview well.
Hope that helps.
Thinking
its not worth it
yes
Thanks for your comment Anwar.
All the best with your certification exam!
YES
All the best!
Yes
That's great Elmo.
All the best with your CCNA exam!
Yes
Thanks for your comment Walid.
All the best with the CCNA exam!
Yes
That's great ariel. All the best with your certification exam.
Yes
That's great Terrence. All the best with your certification exam!
Yes
That's great Kushan. All the best with your certification exams!
Yes
Awesome. All the best with your CCNA certification Shehzad.
Yes
All the best with your certification exam tony!
Yes
That's great Emeka. All the best with your CCNA Exam.