Google Data Analytics : coursera.pxf.io/gbNzrg Google IT Automation With Python: coursera.pxf.io/e4xKEZ Google Project Management: coursera.pxf.io/BXAWGB Google UX Design: coursera.pxf.io/WDKj9J IBM Cybersecurity Analyst: coursera.pxf.io/Xx5YnM IBM Data Analyst: coursera.pxf.io/JrYzVN IBM Data Science: coursera.pxf.io/VyjmYk Meta Social Media Marketing: coursera.pxf.io/oeaqLY Python For Everybody: coursera.pxf.io/ZdeQKW Google IT Support: coursera.pxf.io/EaVnxW
Hello. I’m supposed to choose a university/college really soon, so I was wondering if you could make a video talking about agriculture please 🙏🏼 it would really help me alooot. Plllleeeeaaaasssseeeeee
Maybe I'm just feeling jaded, but I'm noticing a trend. Employers are not hiring entry level when posting for entry level. You can find entry-level job postings in a search, but once you read the job qualification, it's anything but entry level.
@@TheFactsMan looking back on my 14 years of software engineering experience, I firmly believe that software engineering should be a trade with the same infrastructure as union trade shops like HVAC and electricians. College isn’t really useful for us. It moves way too slow and entry level, like you said, doesn’t exist.
Guys just do it, I started the Data Analytics certificate in May 2022 and finished in December at the same time I was applying for internships because I am a Data Analytics major. Just the fact that I could talk about my portfolio and that I could say that I finished my certificate gave me the opportunity to be accepted as an intern in a Data Analytics position in less than a year of having completed the certificate. Note: The certificate DOES NOT prepare you in full to be in that position they are missing more training in SQL and Python and you will need to learn R studio, Tableau and Power BI to have a really strong resume.
Hey, do you think a degree would cover the areas the certificates are lacking in? Also, would doing the certificate adequately prepare you to get in a degree program in analytics?
Not my case, i have been looking for a job since i finished my certificate and i have been called just one time since December. It helps, but doesn't grantee a job, at least in Spain
I think something huge to note about the Google IT Certificate is that it also aligns you well to take the CompTIA A+ exam, although the course is aligned with the 10 series test and the newest one is the 11 series there still is not a huge deviation (just focus on some cloud skills and you'll fill in the gaps). So you can leave this course with a Google certificate and a CompTIA certificate.
Or, you can study from Professor Messer's videos and get your COMPTIA A+. This is if you are looking to move up in the IT industry since the pay for helpdesk is quite low.
It aligns with it but you still can’t use it as sole material to pass the exam. Personally I found this course to be more useful since it got “re-updated” vs it’s initial release in 2020. I found the training in this to be better skill wise and more useful learning wise than just studying for passing an exam to get “certified”. In the end you need both sides of the coin. Skills and Certification (if required) I currently have A+ and Net+ but I still feel lacking skill wise. I’m aiming to finish Sec+ first but I really like the material from the Google IT from a more practical perspective. I will also be aiming to do the Cybersecurity course after. Credentials are one thing but you really need Skills to go with it. Unfortunately, most Employers always want these experienced Techs making it so hard for new inexperienced techs to get that first job.
I got a job with a company called AON as a junior Data Analysts. I hadn’t even finished the certificate at the time. I’m going to college and received an message in my college email. I went ahead and applied. I think it most helped me during the interview process. I mentioned it and they were like wow he’s really trying to learn what we want. It’s definitely more of a conversation starter IMO.
@@thanosthemadtitan5518 Original it was Physics. However, they pay for your schooling so I had to change my major to business. I’m a junior in college so I just double majored in Physics and business.
@@AndreTJones You would have gotten an interview just from those degree associations alone. They probably did more of the leg work than the certificates did. A physics and business double major is no joke.
@@thanosthemadtitan5518 I’ll go through the sequence. First they sent out a general email to students. I then applied to the program. They asked for a resume and made sure I was enrolled in college. I then had 3 interviews. On the second and last interviews I mentioned the certificate and then they hired me.
Currently taking the Project Management Certification course and I absolutely love it. Lots of great information and I'm excited to see the opportunities it brings. I'm about a little past the midway point in the course and I've learned so much already. Don't hesitate to take this one.
@@bane3991 I got it done in like 1-2 months, it's not too difficult a lot of it is just simple quizzes. Last part is a written assignment which can be harder but well worth it.
@@bane3991 I work in the NGO space so for me I needed a bachelors. I agree you do need a bit of work experience, or something (volunteering, etc.) to combine it with the certificate. From what I saw, project management is a skill but not a topic (like IT, Health, Finance, etc.). The certificate allows you to get a strong skill for a topic you want to get into, but it doesn't convince employers you're good to go for the topic itself. Despite all this, if you're on the edge, I'd go ahead and do it. The ease, pacing, and price makes it well worth it
By far one of my top favorite channels on UA-cam with sound advice. Google certs definitely helps build up your resume, but nothing better than being put to the test in a real world setting. Boot camps help a ton.
I got to cybersecurity from a different IT job, so yes it is true. They often need some hybrid role at first and it is a great way to get into it. Like be malware analyst + support, security researcher + data analysis, pentester + system admin etc.
I took the Google IT Support cert, I actually got it for free because of an offer they gave and it took awhile to land a job because the world was locked down, but after it opened I started applying and had a great interview, met the co-owner, she commented on the cert(it was listed on my resume) and the conversation around it led to many other great topics and I got the job... they offered the position at the max compensation range available(about 3x more than I was previously making). I absolutely love these certs and have been thinking about taking more just to get them under my belt. I really enjoyed your content and the way you present it.
@@YungYdoc I didn't have any job related/professional experience. I have done lots of self-learning, building my PC, helping others with issues and just figuring stuff out by Google'ing it. The course was really thorough and gave all the tools and info needed to pass. I have had other courses at places that were low quality or wanted you to buy more and gave silly time constraints but the Google IT cert was very well put together, challenging enough to make you think, but gives you the tools to complete it and it feels like you accomplished something by the end. The course gives you way more than enough time only suggesting 10 hours a week but I finished the course in less than a week.
They need to make the videos shorter cause I be losing focus and they used to do little quizzes during but then stopped about two or three courses in it.
@@joaquinrodriguez7541 I appreciate your interest but just for a privacy thing I would rather not expose things like exact salary on a comment thread on UA-cam. I hope you can understand. I will say before I landed the tech job I was working a pretty low wage, not quite min wage but just something to keep the bills at bay. I am nowhere near rich but finally able to start catching up on debts instead of continuing to sink into debt more. I am sure wages abroad are much different depending on where you are located just as within the USA wages can greatly change depending on where you live.
I'm a software engineer, I did the Digital Marketing fundamentals one. It's a 20-25h one. It gave me some nice fundamentals of marketing, campaigns, segmentation, goals, etc. Half of it is just learning how to work with Google's own tools, but the rest is actually some good, condensed knowledged. I wouldn't say "it's a night and day difference". But gave me an edge once or twice.
@@mosesigiehon8571 the certificate itself no really. It has good knowledge that is "nice to have" for my position, but it doesn't go deep on what a marketing person should know. I've enjoyed the content but I don't even have it mentioned on my LinkedIn.
One thing you might want to consider regarding your recommendations for Tech Sales is that there are multiple roles within Tech Sales. For higher end tech sales at least you have the "sales guy" and the "tech guy". Most of the sales guys don't actually know the technology well, so they partner with someone who is more technical. Sometimes that person is called a Sales Engineer, or a Solution Engineer, or something like that. Ultimately they don't make as much as the "sales guys" but, they do make a great deal of money. The "sales guy" creates the connections, finds the leads, and develops the relationship, and the "tech guy" actually looks at the customers' needs and scopes out the solution and sometime partners on the execution. An example might be if you work for AWS, you can have an Account Manager that is a basically a sales guy. And then a Solution Architect which actually understands the services and helps the customer adopt those services.
I'm a Front-end engineer, and I can say with 100% confidence that any course will not give you a job. But in programming, you can develop your portfolio and this will give you a job
Do you think it's better to go the self taught route to land a job or get a tech related job like IT to get my foot through the door , learn code then try and change to develop. Sorry if question seems off im completely new to this trying to get any information I can about how to break into tech w/o a degree.
@@ari_c6900 I’ve completed the IT certificate and I was able to get an entry level job with a tech company. Last year 2022 I made $65,000.! No college degree whatsoever just high school diploma. It’s absolutely possible! I made the guy they hooked me up with the job driving Uber ! He was a project manager ! 😂 it’s absolutely possible!
I work in IT, just a warning it's super hard to move up past helpdesk/support. Also, many small-mid business want to operate with a small 1-4 man IT dept for hundreds, if not thousands of customers/staff. Expect some level of afterhours support - just avoid orgs that want you glued to your phone 24/7/365. I don't hold any of the google certs, but I do hold Net+ and Sec +. Some jobs don't care for certs, it's moved to experience even for entry level... which is an endless loop. Expect your seniors to hoard information and snap at you for asking questions while expecting you to be on their level. Not everyone is like this, but this field attracts a certain type of individual that are insufferable to work with. Systems Analyst seems to be a newer title thrown around, though not as common as Helpdesk/Support. Even with my going on 5 years of experience it's been very rough finding any remote work. Data Analyst from my POV seems more of a normie friendly path, just I'm not seeing the jobs Shane is. I've spent a few months learning SQL, PowerBi, Excel and found a lot of it pretty boring.
Bro I just want boring job where i get average salary probably more than support guy. That's it. Boring job is best job you could ever have. Tell me what i need to do and which language i need to learn to get those boring jobs. I'm not good at developing tho that's why I'm searching for boring jobs in it
Yeah this has been my experience, through and through. I've been stuck in helpdesk for so long. I attained my security+, but when a position for cybersecurity opened up in my company, it was somehow given to a guy who didn't have *any* certs, let alone the security+. That really left a sour taste in my mouth and made me regret even studying for the thing. Then I took a 200hr boot camp for coding, but just found I didn't like it at all. And you're dead on about stafffing... I've never worked a help desk position that had the appropriate level of techs. Every where I've worked, it always seems like we need double the amount of people we have. The other problem is, I always tend to be the most conversational/sociable person on any help desk, so I have to work hard to not pigeon hole myself into the position since so many of my coworkers have limited social skills. I just don't know where to go from here... I honestly feel stuck and will probably end up going back to school to learn another trade. IT seems like a big joke these days. I got into it because I wanted to work with my hands, not thinking that the future would be majority software/cloud stuff. And I've been doing it long enough that I get asked to manage, but I don't want to deal with people... I want to deal with machines.
***Just an idea for future videos: It would be great if there’s a way to gage and rate the stress associated with the jobs/positions these certifications are geared towards. Another factor to consider is the likely hood of being able to work remotely, as in a ‘Cyber Nomad’? Of course there’s a ton of variables and every company/situation is different but lifestyle factors such as travel mobility and inherent job stress are as important as salary. Who’s with me!? Thanks for the great videos BTW!!!
I will agree that the P4E course - at least when I took it - doesn’t help you build your portfolio like you need for a job. You have to make your own projects. That being said, I took the class and then made my own projects and applied to jobs, been a Python engineer for the last 7 years!
I'd actually put IT Automation in the B or C tear instead. It is really good if you have experience...and is a good followup to the Python for everybody or the new Google Advanced Data Analytics course. The hardness of the course makes it more credible once you complete it.
I’ve been a software engineer for about 13 years now and automation is absolutely blowing up and has been for the last 5 years or so. I got certified in a couple platforms (Ui Path, Automation Anywhere, etc) but defaulted to Python with Selenium and have had zero lack of work. Recently with ChatGPT, my workflow has become so much faster and I’ve been able to take on way more work and I am cleaning up. Highly recommend automation.
I’m taking Goole data analytic cert working for the IT company. Not having had a strong background myself, I jumped in a role in IT companyand so learned I should have a skillset. I know this course will not get me all the skills I might need, and yet it touches all the fundamental a analyst should have. I see why they created this cert, as I suppose a lot of ppl might come just with a skill they quickly learned but without any understanding the nature of analysis system in the job field. It does provoke me to expand to other courses such as sql, power bi and Tablue. But for this, i would not have a goal/way of my career path, and would be just being overwhelmed and scared in the middle of my current job. I’m lucky that I already have a junior role in a small company, but without this, I wouldn’t have been a competent analysis at all.
Entry level data analysts do not make 90k per year. Can’t believe you are even saying this. Expect around 40k-70k entry level depending on your state. MAYBE some huge companies in California you can get near 90k but probably not as an entry level position.
I just got done with the data analyst cert and a 2 year degree 0 experience I applied for a job based in Hong Kong and signed a 110k contract 😢 so they can make that much very much so. In the US I couldn’t find but when I looked in Hong Kong I found a few American companies there that were paying that or more.. yes I had to move to Hong Kong but that’s fine :)
Half way through the data analyst cert my company promotes me from sales into analytics. I couldn’t have gotten there that quickly without these courses. Highly recommend!
The stuff I learned about data analytics opened my eyes to tools I didn't know about 😂 Certainly helped with my confidence and skills in research, data organization and presentation. I'm currently a sales and procurement officer, and the stuff I learned is helping me big time in my current job while building my technical portfolio on the side.
I would bump the python for everybody and it automation up one level...Combined they give you a well-rounded understanding of Python and how to use it for automation.
I am working my way through a number of Google Certifications to supplement what I am learning in my grad school program. They are really good. 👍 I have goal of spatial data science with focus on GEOINT and AI/ML related to climate resilience and disaster resilience. Loving Google Advanced Analytics which is not mentioned here. Nice video 👍
I am actually in the middle of the IT support Cert right now but I was planning on doing more Certs. Glad this video came up in my recommended. I kind of already planned on doing most of the google ones but it is good to know so more information.
The Meta Social Media marketing wasn’t too bad. What you learn in it gives you a good idea how Digital Marketing works. But it’s more for Digital Social media marketing jobs in my thought. When it comes with how enjoying the lectures are, everyone will have there own thoughts. One of the instructors who you see in the videos was a bit boring, but the lectures are valuable to help you even build your business with the education given to help guid you.
I agree the lecturer was boring. I didnt like the structure of the program. I wanted to learn tools, etc and it was mostly watching, peer to peer type of projects and exams. I
@@DotyGess for me it took me about 3 months. It depends how fast you want to go through the program. But it’s gives you the valuable knowledge and skills to learn how to market in Facebook.
I’ve taken the IT specialist google certificates and it has overshadowed my CompTIA A+ cert, I’ve had recruiters asked me about that certification and I did that when I was in Covid lockdown and just wanted a career change from business administration to IT
17:15 The first MOOC that is strictly real world projects for entry level skills will be highly successful. It HAS to be project based. Most people who are looking to transition careers may not have the creativity, definitely won’t have the experience, to come up with their own projects. A project only based product for career changers/newbies will be more valuable than anything out
I obtained the Project Manager certificate from Google. I live in Mexico and took the course to secure a role in a project. However, it only lasted for 6 months, and since then, I haven't had the opportunity to apply the skills I learned. The problem is that many companies here prefer professionals with a degree in IT. Additionally, the company I work for lacks the structure and culture to implement this knowledge. My advice is to assess your current role and evaluate the likelihood of growth within your company before pursuing any certificates.
My friend and I kept getting laid off from the Mortgage field. She completed the Data Analytics course. I did not bc I was skeptical. She landed a job TWO WEEKS after finishing the course. I immediately signed up lol. She is now on her way to becoming an accountant at her job!
I do want to add that if you live in Los Angeles sign up for LA county card and use that to sign up with coursera and you don’t need to pay the $39/ month
Tu obediencia arruina la atracción para las mujeres (es algo evolutivo) En términos de su atracción por ti, este es un hecho muy importante que debes entender. Cuanto más obediente seas a sus deseos y demandas, menos atracción sentirá por ti. Eso no significa que se sienta menos atraída físicamente por ti o que te ame menos. Simplemente significa que SENTIRÁ menos atracción por ti. Y cuando se trata de la atracción femenina, se trata de cómo se siente ella, y cómo tu como hombre estimulas sus emociones. Las mujeres son seres emocionales, y necesitan SENTIR atracción por ti, más que cualquier otra cosa u otro hombre, para que ella esté y permanezca ENAMORADA de ti. Sin embargo, si quieres que ella esté ENAMORADA de ti, es importante entender que tu obediencia arruina la atracción para ella, ya que eso no le da la seguridad emocional en ti, de verte como su protector, y superior para que ella pueda asegurar la descendencia de sus genes al procrear hijos contigo.
S Google Data Analytics A Google Project Management Google UX Design IBM Data Analyst B IBM Data Science Meta Social Media Marketing C Python For Everybody D Google IT Automation With Python IBM Cybersecurity Analyst F None
Project management is extremely industry specific and a vast majority of it is siloed into either construction, military contracts (that require security clearance), or very high end computer architect and design. If you already have your eye on a specific job that requires some type of PM cert then definitely get it, otherwise I'd encourage you to start with one of the other certifications first.
@@Daisyhatingugolyee I'm currently halfway through the first course, although I only study when it fits into my schedule. Could be much faster if I aimed to finish as soon as possible, but I'm thoroughly enjoying the learning process and absorbing all the lessons. I'll provide another update soon, hopefully regarding acceptance into the job. Claiming it!
Like any degree or certificate., they won’t get you the job but it does help you learn and it’s a good talking point. These certificates are good to add to any resume and it shows that you care about improving your skills and staying up to date.
Can you write out the names of the certificates listed best to not best somewhere? My auditory software can't pick up the images at 15:39 . Please that would make your well thought out presentation much more accessible to people who use accessibility software. Thank you.
It would be really helpful if you keep the tier list on the screen and use the titles of the certificates instead of those photos. Otherwise a very informative video! Thank you!
Professional guilds, job examinations and certification, and regulation of entry into controlled professions are activities nearly five thousand years old. The modern twist on it is the proliferation of types as recruiting tools, with the certificate analogous to a buffet menu inviting the candidate to keep eating to satiation and beyond.
Entry level marketing may pay peanuts, but if you get the skills and connections to start your own agency, you'll blow by what the others are making and have the freedom of no 9-5.
Just a warning for those who have no background in project management but your thinking of getting a certification. I have a bachelor's degree in project management, and I am constantly getting spammed by recruiters who want a PM for things that are in no way related to my skillset or resume. The recruiters are simply doing a keyword search and then spamming thousands of us with the words "project management" on our resume, linkedin profiles, etc. Honestly i was getting so many garbage reqs that were in no way related to my skillset that I removed all references to PM from my online profiles.
I rarely comment on videos but this video was completely helpful and eye-opening. Thank you! Longtime subscriber of your channel, love what you do sir.
Hey @Shane Hummus! Watching your vid, I wanted to let you know that with the META social media marketing certification, I got a door to door sales role first and after some experience I’m now working at Google! Def worth it just more of a “soft skill” and it’s good for entrepreneurs. Thanks :)
I've been in IT for over 25 years. This smells like bullshit and is giving noobs unrealistic salary expectations right out of the gate. If you are starting out, you better know the basics before starting this stuff. CompTIA stuff. Linux, Networking, A+... understand what the stuff you will be building, runs on. That can get you on to a help desk. Now you need to grind and shine. Find an area in the company that interests you, and start studies to build skills in that direction. Next step afaic is either cloud or security. Those will provide a full career. I went into VOIP 15 years ago. Dumb idea, got out. Dead end. Security and off-site computing will never end. That means certification up the Security track, you learn to pen test etc. For cloud Azure or AWS cert is the way to go. But they'll be hard to understand without the underpinning of the CompTIA learning. The G certs don't pass the shite smell test. And what's with the subscription? To keep the cert active? Absolute bullshit if that's the case.
The problem is that these certifications although valuable still require real time work experience especially in Canada. I searched for many Project Manager roles and most of them require previous work experience even at entry level.
I have a Google "Project Management" certificate. This is a 6 certificate regarding project management. It took me 5 months. The knowledge from this training helps me a lot in my work.
You guys I just finished the Google Data Analytics Certificate and I didn’t pay a dime. Take advantage of the financial aid. I got it for all 8 courses. I got full aid but they can give a certain percentage off
What do you think about Googles Digital Marketing Certificate? Do you think it’s a good course and you could get a job in Digital Marketing? Love your channel and keep up the good work!
If you're relatively young without obligations, don't pay attention to what he said about salaries or open positions, that's rat race thinking. First of all there's an endless sea of demand for (effective) content, 2nd if you get the right skills and connections you can freelance or even start your own agency and not only make more than the 9-5 salary jobs, you'll have more freedom (and fun IMO, I'm tech savvy but I don't enjoy working with tech like I do the creative aspects of copywriting/marketing). It's not hard to get started, write some engaging copy like a good cold outreach email or show some SEO optimizations and business owners will want your help. If you get stuck, gpt can do about anything now with the right prompt.
As someone who cares nothing for tech I might throw on the social media marketing and project management ones just to expand my portfolio and skill set.
I have over 10 years work experience as a Project Coordinator. Many employers are looking for ppl with Data Analytics education/experience on top of having admin and project coordination skills. The cert can easily supplement work experience in admin or pc.
I got the IBM Cybersecurity Analyst cert to complement my software engineering experience; I think for that purpose it is an excellent one. I can see it not being a great pick for someone trying to get entry level access to a career though and I wouldn't want to be a "cybersecurity analyst" even if it doubled my pay.
Agreed. The certifications are great for adding a dash of spice to your resume. Also, if you graduated from a pretty generic degree or diploma (let's say B.S. IT or B.S. Business mgt with no particular major), a series of certifications and skill sets related to your targeted specialization can give you advantage over others during the initial hiring phase/resume review.
I agree, most certificates are trash, and a waste of time. But the google certificates, IBM, meta and so on, those have "some weight" and look good on your CV/linkedIn. I never put certifications from udemy and even from coursera on my profile but google/ibm stuff is gold, still less valuable than a portefolio and proctorade exams/degree.
This is super motivating and helpful. I am getting the company I work for to assist me financially with the data analytics course! I have no scientific background but I somehow landed a position as a monitoring specialist. I love it so far and data analysis would help me step up and it's totally my kind of stuff! Good to know I am on the right track!
Need your review on the new Advanced Google Data Analytics course, I'm almost done with the Google Data Analytics course.. I am interested in the new course as it covers Python and Statistics.
Highly recommended. And I agree with the previous comment; the stats, regression and ML segments are challenging but stick with it and you'll get through.
Meta certificate from Coursera great for beginner and give the basics, but Meta make changes too often so course need to be updated.but the plus of this course that you can take a meta certified exam and get a badge for your cv.
So in order to read your Tier list when it's up on screen we have to memorize the stock photo thumbnails and which course they correspond to? lol. Good video but cmon bro.
This is very helpful! I'm interested in transitioning into tech but I want to pursue an area with a low learning curve and is also not too saturated. I just completed the Google Data Analytics certificate. Overall, I was satisfied, but as a former Math instructor I think there is room for improvement as far as format of the course goes. I feel they can make it more interactive and also walk learners through a case study from beginning to completion. I'm still stuck with the Case study. Also, I didn't feel confident after completing the course since you really have to put everything to practice to connect with it. Also, it's true what you mentioned where more skills need to be acquired. I already enrolled in a SQL class with UC Davis.
IT Support Certification, I have already done .Almost finish with Data Analytics and Cybersecurity. But yes still need also learn a lot and practice alot those skills .!! thanks alot mam for ur video ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉
In Russia big companies cooperate with big universities, create new programs, courses, departments and even faculties. I believe, it may be a good aproach too, as it is easier to adapt and improve something rather than start something from scratch
For example, Tinkoff, Yandex, VK and Avito have their own schools in analytics, data science and big data infrastucture Tinkoff creates its own university with 2-year masters-like program in Data Science. Yandex cooperates with different universities. Like Tinkoff, ABBYY, Sber, etc, Yandex has its own department in MIPT. Last two years in bachelor in MIPT student can spend in Data Analysis department of Yandex, take different courses in Statistics, NLP, CV, RL, Go, Bayesian Statistics, etc, and write bachelor thesis with specialist in Yandex In HSE Yandex funded Faculty of Computer Science, and lots of winners of school student olympiads in math and programming go there
Will a degree or certificate teach you everything you need to know at Company X. No. But companies will see that you are trying to learn, or have learned, what they have in demand. And that can get you hired. Even when you graduate with a Masters Degree, you still have to learn how Company X does their thing, their vibe, company lingo, and company culture. But having a good cert and a good attitude can definitely get your foot in the door. Interns should *always* get paid. If you are talking to a hiring manager or someone in the interview process and they say that for X amount of time as an intern you don't get paid while you're "learning" -- run, quickly, and find a decent company. Also good to start the interview process with "Is this the kind of company" or "Is this the kind of team" I want to be a part of. You are interviewing them -- not the other way around.
Great Video. Thanks! I've been thinking on getting a coursera account for a while now. Since I currently live in Iran and there are some restrictions on the payments which I can get or give and also we have the sanctions on us I don't know how's that gonna work out for me personally. But your video gave me a pretty good vision and I'm thankful for that! ❤
Hey Shane, I just stumbled upon your channel and wanted to say I'm enjoying all your videos. I also would like to share my concern for your shoulder joint and muscles for holding that Tea Cup in the same hand video after video. Balance out those arm muscles! ;-)
10:09 lol they aren't just names dude, they're entirely different fields of study within IT. That's like saying there are a bunch of names for doctors. Like no, they're specialist in their field.
I have taken the Google IT Certification program and it is nice complement with Comptia A+ Certification. Now it won't get you a job but help get an Interview.
Abit of insider knowlage here. I work for a nonprofit that partnered with Google to offered the Google IT Support cert and when this course is offered as a physical programs that offers the Google IT cert they often ether have funding and an agreement with the government or direct partnership with google. Often beyond just offering the class they are required to hire a percentage of students that complete the cert.
Hi shane and community, I’m currently going into my second year of college and had been doing a personal project in mobile detailing for about 3 years. I built everything from the UI to the website (albeit in squarespace). I am currently a MIS major and have marketing as a minor, but despite this I feel a great insecurity in regards to not knowing nearly enough software. I have a couple of great opportunities some people in my network have offered me but I feel vastly under qualified (anywhere from building an airbnb style sharing platform to hard coded websites). With this being said I’m thinking about either completely changing my major to Computer IS or going double (and try not to kill myself). I also want to see how valuable it would be to certify myself in some of these Google certifications and how they compare to LinkedIn ones too. But as of now like Shane said in the video I feel overloaded and overwhelmed with choices and idek what I personally want to do
Google Data Analytics :
coursera.pxf.io/gbNzrg
Google IT Automation With Python:
coursera.pxf.io/e4xKEZ
Google Project Management:
coursera.pxf.io/BXAWGB
Google UX Design:
coursera.pxf.io/WDKj9J
IBM Cybersecurity Analyst:
coursera.pxf.io/Xx5YnM
IBM Data Analyst:
coursera.pxf.io/JrYzVN
IBM Data Science:
coursera.pxf.io/VyjmYk
Meta Social Media Marketing:
coursera.pxf.io/oeaqLY
Python For Everybody:
coursera.pxf.io/ZdeQKW
Google IT Support:
coursera.pxf.io/EaVnxW
Google IT Support tier?
@Andrew Fritts he said best so I'm guessing S
Hello. I’m supposed to choose a university/college really soon, so I was wondering if you could make a video talking about agriculture please 🙏🏼 it would really help me alooot. Plllleeeeaaaasssseeeeee
Have you seen the new Google Advanced Data Analytics Professional Certificate? It also teaches python
Hi, what about courses to do with artificial intelligence and machine learning
Maybe I'm just feeling jaded, but I'm noticing a trend. Employers are not hiring entry level when posting for entry level. You can find entry-level job postings in a search, but once you read the job qualification, it's anything but entry level.
TRUE!!!!! you should get a paid apprenticeship first
@@TheFactsMan Maybe that's just a piece of the industry 🧩 puzzles 🧩.
@@TheFactsMan looking back on my 14 years of software engineering experience, I firmly believe that software engineering should be a trade with the same infrastructure as union trade shops like HVAC and electricians. College isn’t really useful for us. It moves way too slow and entry level, like you said, doesn’t exist.
Even the internships lol
The other trend is companies are outsourcing. Just lost a job opportunity because the position I was applying for was moved to India to cut costs...
Guys just do it, I started the Data Analytics certificate in May 2022 and finished in December at the same time I was applying for internships because I am a Data Analytics major. Just the fact that I could talk about my portfolio and that I could say that I finished my certificate gave me the opportunity to be accepted as an intern in a Data Analytics position in less than a year of having completed the certificate. Note: The certificate DOES NOT prepare you in full to be in that position they are missing more training in SQL and Python and you will need to learn R studio, Tableau and Power BI to have a really strong resume.
Hey, do you think a degree would cover the areas the certificates are lacking in? Also, would doing the certificate adequately prepare you to get in a degree program in analytics?
oie bro.. hice lo mismo que tu, tengo major y acabe el certificado y aun asi no puedo conseguir trabajo... como hago?
bro i dont have any experience nor have i done any school or course about it,do you think it will help to get a job?
ChatGPT dude
Not my case, i have been looking for a job since i finished my certificate and i have been called just one time since December. It helps, but doesn't grantee a job, at least in Spain
I think something huge to note about the Google IT Certificate is that it also aligns you well to take the CompTIA A+ exam, although the course is aligned with the 10 series test and the newest one is the 11 series there still is not a huge deviation (just focus on some cloud skills and you'll fill in the gaps). So you can leave this course with a Google certificate and a CompTIA certificate.
Or, you can study from Professor Messer's videos and get your COMPTIA A+. This is if you are looking to move up in the IT industry since the pay for helpdesk is quite low.
It aligns with it but you still can’t use it as sole material to pass the exam. Personally I found this course to be more useful since it got “re-updated” vs it’s initial release in 2020. I found the training in this to be better skill wise and more useful learning wise than just studying for passing an exam to get “certified”.
In the end you need both sides of the coin. Skills and Certification (if required)
I currently have A+ and Net+ but I still feel lacking skill wise. I’m aiming to finish Sec+ first but I really like the material from the Google IT from a more practical perspective. I will also be aiming to do the Cybersecurity course after. Credentials are one thing but you really need Skills to go with it. Unfortunately, most Employers always want these experienced Techs making it so hard for new inexperienced techs to get that first job.
Entry salary is what they mean
Which exam should you take first? compTIA or Google?
I got a job with a company called AON as a junior Data Analysts. I hadn’t even finished the certificate at the time. I’m going to college and received an message in my college email. I went ahead and applied. I think it most helped me during the interview process. I mentioned it and they were like wow he’s really trying to learn what we want. It’s definitely more of a conversation starter IMO.
What major?
@@thanosthemadtitan5518 Original it was Physics. However, they pay for your schooling so I had to change my major to business. I’m a junior in college so I just double majored in Physics and business.
@@AndreTJones You would have gotten an interview just from those degree associations alone. They probably did more of the leg work than the certificates did. A physics and business double major is no joke.
@@thanosthemadtitan5518 I’ll go through the sequence. First they sent out a general email to students. I then applied to the program. They asked for a resume and made sure I was enrolled in college. I then had 3 interviews. On the second and last interviews I mentioned the certificate and then they hired me.
Congrats!!! Aon is HUGE!!!
Currently taking the Project Management Certification course and I absolutely love it. Lots of great information and I'm excited to see the opportunities it brings. I'm about a little past the midway point in the course and I've learned so much already. Don't hesitate to take this one.
How long is the course and is it difficult?
@@bane3991 I got it done in like 1-2 months, it's not too difficult a lot of it is just simple quizzes. Last part is a written assignment which can be harder but well worth it.
@GhostlyTeehee That's not bad. Were you able to get a job in that field with just the certificates? Or do you need a bachelors too?
@@bane3991 I work in the NGO space so for me I needed a bachelors.
I agree you do need a bit of work experience, or something (volunteering, etc.) to combine it with the certificate. From what I saw, project management is a skill but not a topic (like IT, Health, Finance, etc.). The certificate allows you to get a strong skill for a topic you want to get into, but it doesn't convince employers you're good to go for the topic itself.
Despite all this, if you're on the edge, I'd go ahead and do it. The ease, pacing, and price makes it well worth it
@@GhostlyTeehee uu
By far one of my top favorite channels on UA-cam with sound advice. Google certs definitely helps build up your resume, but nothing better than being put to the test in a real world setting. Boot camps help a ton.
Agreed real work experience is king.
I got to cybersecurity from a different IT job, so yes it is true. They often need some hybrid role at first and it is a great way to get into it. Like be malware analyst + support, security researcher + data analysis, pentester + system admin etc.
I took the Google IT Support cert, I actually got it for free because of an offer they gave and it took awhile to land a job because the world was locked down, but after it opened I started applying and had a great interview, met the co-owner, she commented on the cert(it was listed on my resume) and the conversation around it led to many other great topics and I got the job... they offered the position at the max compensation range available(about 3x more than I was previously making). I absolutely love these certs and have been thinking about taking more just to get them under my belt. I really enjoyed your content and the way you present it.
Did you have any prior experience before taking the Google IT Support certification?
@@YungYdoc I didn't have any job related/professional experience. I have done lots of self-learning, building my PC, helping others with issues and just figuring stuff out by Google'ing it. The course was really thorough and gave all the tools and info needed to pass. I have had other courses at places that were low quality or wanted you to buy more and gave silly time constraints but the Google IT cert was very well put together, challenging enough to make you think, but gives you the tools to complete it and it feels like you accomplished something by the end. The course gives you way more than enough time only suggesting 10 hours a week but I finished the course in less than a week.
They need to make the videos shorter cause I be losing focus and they used to do little quizzes during but then stopped about two or three courses in it.
Congrats bro! How much are you earning right now? Just to compare Im abroad.
@@joaquinrodriguez7541 I appreciate your interest but just for a privacy thing I would rather not expose things like exact salary on a comment thread on UA-cam. I hope you can understand. I will say before I landed the tech job I was working a pretty low wage, not quite min wage but just something to keep the bills at bay. I am nowhere near rich but finally able to start catching up on debts instead of continuing to sink into debt more. I am sure wages abroad are much different depending on where you are located just as within the USA wages can greatly change depending on where you live.
I'm a software engineer, I did the Digital Marketing fundamentals one. It's a 20-25h one. It gave me some nice fundamentals of marketing, campaigns, segmentation, goals, etc. Half of it is just learning how to work with Google's own tools, but the rest is actually some good, condensed knowledged.
I wouldn't say "it's a night and day difference". But gave me an edge once or twice.
Would you say it is worth getting the certificate to get future jobs?
@@mosesigiehon8571 the certificate itself no really. It has good knowledge that is "nice to have" for my position, but it doesn't go deep on what a marketing person should know. I've enjoyed the content but I don't even have it mentioned on my LinkedIn.
One thing you might want to consider regarding your recommendations for Tech Sales is that there are multiple roles within Tech Sales. For higher end tech sales at least you have the "sales guy" and the "tech guy". Most of the sales guys don't actually know the technology well, so they partner with someone who is more technical. Sometimes that person is called a Sales Engineer, or a Solution Engineer, or something like that. Ultimately they don't make as much as the "sales guys" but, they do make a great deal of money. The "sales guy" creates the connections, finds the leads, and develops the relationship, and the "tech guy" actually looks at the customers' needs and scopes out the solution and sometime partners on the execution. An example might be if you work for AWS, you can have an Account Manager that is a basically a sales guy. And then a Solution Architect which actually understands the services and helps the customer adopt those services.
I'm a Front-end engineer, and I can say with 100% confidence that any course will not give you a job. But in programming, you can develop your portfolio and this will give you a job
Do you think it's better to go the self taught route to land a job or get a tech related job like IT to get my foot through the door , learn code then try and change to develop. Sorry if question seems off im completely new to this trying to get any information I can about how to break into tech w/o a degree.
@@ari_c6900 I’ve completed the IT certificate and I was able to get an entry level job with a tech company. Last year 2022 I made $65,000.! No college degree whatsoever just high school diploma. It’s absolutely possible! I made the guy they hooked me up with the job driving Uber ! He was a project manager ! 😂 it’s absolutely possible!
I work in IT, just a warning it's super hard to move up past helpdesk/support. Also, many small-mid business want to operate with a small 1-4 man IT dept for hundreds, if not thousands of customers/staff. Expect some level of afterhours support - just avoid orgs that want you glued to your phone 24/7/365. I don't hold any of the google certs, but I do hold Net+ and Sec +. Some jobs don't care for certs, it's moved to experience even for entry level... which is an endless loop. Expect your seniors to hoard information and snap at you for asking questions while expecting you to be on their level. Not everyone is like this, but this field attracts a certain type of individual that are insufferable to work with.
Systems Analyst seems to be a newer title thrown around, though not as common as Helpdesk/Support. Even with my going on 5 years of experience it's been very rough finding any remote work.
Data Analyst from my POV seems more of a normie friendly path, just I'm not seeing the jobs Shane is. I've spent a few months learning SQL, PowerBi, Excel and found a lot of it pretty boring.
Bro I just want boring job where i get average salary probably more than support guy. That's it. Boring job is best job you could ever have. Tell me what i need to do and which language i need to learn to get those boring jobs. I'm not good at developing tho that's why I'm searching for boring jobs in it
Yeah this has been my experience, through and through. I've been stuck in helpdesk for so long. I attained my security+, but when a position for cybersecurity opened up in my company, it was somehow given to a guy who didn't have *any* certs, let alone the security+. That really left a sour taste in my mouth and made me regret even studying for the thing. Then I took a 200hr boot camp for coding, but just found I didn't like it at all.
And you're dead on about stafffing... I've never worked a help desk position that had the appropriate level of techs. Every where I've worked, it always seems like we need double the amount of people we have. The other problem is, I always tend to be the most conversational/sociable person on any help desk, so I have to work hard to not pigeon hole myself into the position since so many of my coworkers have limited social skills.
I just don't know where to go from here... I honestly feel stuck and will probably end up going back to school to learn another trade. IT seems like a big joke these days. I got into it because I wanted to work with my hands, not thinking that the future would be majority software/cloud stuff. And I've been doing it long enough that I get asked to manage, but I don't want to deal with people... I want to deal with machines.
Does DMVNERDS cover all these tiers?
Perfect timing! This is just what I was looking for! Thank you
Same
***Just an idea for future videos: It would be great if there’s a way to gage and rate the stress associated with the jobs/positions these certifications are geared towards. Another factor to consider is the likely hood of being able to work remotely, as in a ‘Cyber Nomad’?
Of course there’s a ton of variables and every company/situation is different but lifestyle factors such as travel mobility and inherent job stress are as important as salary. Who’s with me!?
Thanks for the great videos BTW!!!
I will agree that the P4E course - at least when I took it - doesn’t help you build your portfolio like you need for a job. You have to make your own projects. That being said, I took the class and then made my own projects and applied to jobs, been a Python engineer for the last 7 years!
I'd actually put IT Automation in the B or C tear instead. It is really good if you have experience...and is a good followup to the Python for everybody or the new Google Advanced Data Analytics course. The hardness of the course makes it more credible once you complete it.
I’ve been a software engineer for about 13 years now and automation is absolutely blowing up and has been for the last 5 years or so. I got certified in a couple platforms (Ui Path, Automation Anywhere, etc) but defaulted to Python with Selenium and have had zero lack of work. Recently with ChatGPT, my workflow has become so much faster and I’ve been able to take on way more work and I am cleaning up. Highly recommend automation.
I’m mid way thru the meta front end web development cert. I love it. I’m learning so much.
Did you have any coding knowledge, prior to take the course? I've thought about it, but I know nothing about coding.
I’m taking Goole data analytic cert working for the IT company. Not having had a strong background myself, I jumped in a role in IT companyand so learned I should have a skillset. I know this course will not get me all the skills I might need, and yet it touches all the fundamental a analyst should have. I see why they created this cert, as I suppose a lot of ppl might come just with a skill they quickly learned but without any understanding the nature of analysis system in the job field. It does provoke me to expand to other courses such as sql, power bi and Tablue. But for this, i would not have a goal/way of my career path, and would be just being overwhelmed and scared in the middle of my current job. I’m lucky that I already have a junior role in a small company, but without this, I wouldn’t have been a competent analysis at all.
Entry level data analysts do not make 90k per year. Can’t believe you are even saying this. Expect around 40k-70k entry level depending on your state. MAYBE some huge companies in California you can get near 90k but probably not as an entry level position.
I just got done with the data analyst cert and a 2 year degree 0 experience I applied for a job based in Hong Kong and signed a 110k contract 😢 so they can make that much very much so. In the US I couldn’t find but when I looked in Hong Kong I found a few American companies there that were paying that or more.. yes I had to move to Hong Kong but that’s fine :)
Half way through the data analyst cert my company promotes me from sales into analytics. I couldn’t have gotten there that quickly without these courses. Highly recommend!
Google or IBM?
The stuff I learned about data analytics opened my eyes to tools I didn't know about 😂 Certainly helped with my confidence and skills in research, data organization and presentation. I'm currently a sales and procurement officer, and the stuff I learned is helping me big time in my current job while building my technical portfolio on the side.
I would bump the python for everybody and it automation up one level...Combined they give you a well-rounded understanding of Python and how to use it for automation.
I am working my way through a number of Google Certifications to supplement what I am learning in my grad school program. They are really good. 👍 I have goal of spatial data science with focus on GEOINT and AI/ML related to climate resilience and disaster resilience. Loving Google Advanced Analytics which is not mentioned here. Nice video 👍
I am actually in the middle of the IT support Cert right now but I was planning on doing more Certs. Glad this video came up in my recommended. I kind of already planned on doing most of the google ones but it is good to know so more information.
The Meta Social Media marketing wasn’t too bad. What you learn in it gives you a good idea how Digital Marketing works. But it’s more for Digital Social media marketing jobs in my thought.
When it comes with how enjoying the lectures are, everyone will have there own thoughts. One of the instructors who you see in the videos was a bit boring, but the lectures are valuable to help you even build your business with the education given to help guid you.
I agree the lecturer was boring. I didnt like the structure of the program. I wanted to learn tools, etc and it was mostly watching, peer to peer type of projects and exams. I
how long did it take you to finish it ?
@@DotyGess for me it took me about 3 months. It depends how fast you want to go through the program. But it’s gives you the valuable knowledge and skills to learn how to market in Facebook.
I’ve taken the IT specialist google certificates and it has overshadowed my CompTIA A+ cert, I’ve had recruiters asked me about that certification and I did that when I was in Covid lockdown and just wanted a career change from business administration to IT
17:15 The first MOOC that is strictly real world projects for entry level skills will be highly successful. It HAS to be project based. Most people who are looking to transition careers may not have the creativity, definitely won’t have the experience, to come up with their own projects.
A project only based product for career changers/newbies will be more valuable than anything out
Can you tell me more or give examples
I would love to hear some examples too
please don't stop making videos, don't know how lost I would be without them, keep up the good work.
Are you Nepali?
Glad to see a Nepali taking his advice!
What About Google E-commerce And Digital Marketing Certificate??
I obtained the Project Manager certificate from Google. I live in Mexico and took the course to secure a role in a project. However, it only lasted for 6 months, and since then, I haven't had the opportunity to apply the skills I learned. The problem is that many companies here prefer professionals with a degree in IT. Additionally, the company I work for lacks the structure and culture to implement this knowledge.
My advice is to assess your current role and evaluate the likelihood of growth within your company before pursuing any certificates.
My friend and I kept getting laid off from the Mortgage field. She completed the Data Analytics course. I did not bc I was skeptical. She landed a job TWO WEEKS after finishing the course. I immediately signed up lol. She is now on her way to becoming an accountant at her job!
I do want to add that if you live in Los Angeles sign up for LA county card and use that to sign up with coursera and you don’t need to pay the $39/ month
Tu obediencia arruina la atracción para las mujeres (es algo evolutivo)
En términos de su atracción por ti, este es un hecho muy importante que debes entender. Cuanto más obediente seas a sus deseos y demandas, menos atracción sentirá por ti. Eso no significa que se sienta menos atraída físicamente por ti o que te ame menos. Simplemente significa que SENTIRÁ menos atracción por ti. Y cuando se trata de la atracción femenina, se trata de cómo se siente ella, y cómo tu como hombre estimulas sus emociones. Las mujeres son seres emocionales, y necesitan SENTIR atracción por ti, más que cualquier otra cosa u otro hombre, para que ella esté y permanezca ENAMORADA de ti. Sin embargo, si quieres que ella esté ENAMORADA de ti, es importante entender que tu obediencia arruina la atracción para ella, ya que eso no le da la seguridad emocional en ti, de verte como su protector, y superior para que ella pueda asegurar la descendencia de sus genes al procrear hijos contigo.
18:16 if anyone is looking for the final tier list he makes
I wish the names were listed
Where are the names?
Bad UX!
S
Google Data Analytics
A
Google Project Management
Google UX Design
IBM Data Analyst
B
IBM Data Science
Meta Social Media Marketing
C
Python For Everybody
D
Google IT Automation With Python
IBM Cybersecurity Analyst
F
None
Thank you for the insightful video! This inspired me to start my journey with the Google Data Analytics Certification. 🙂
Project management is extremely industry specific and a vast majority of it is siloed into either construction, military contracts (that require security clearance), or very high end computer architect and design. If you already have your eye on a specific job that requires some type of PM cert then definitely get it, otherwise I'd encourage you to start with one of the other certifications first.
was just on 7 minute mark of this video and I immediately enrolled myself on the top course, I will probably not regret this! thank you so much
can you give us updates on your journey on a later date? ty❤😭
@@Daisyhatingugolyee I'm currently halfway through the first course, although I only study when it fits into my schedule. Could be much faster if I aimed to finish as soon as possible, but I'm thoroughly enjoying the learning process and absorbing all the lessons. I'll provide another update soon, hopefully regarding acceptance into the job. Claiming it!
I just received my certificate for all 8 courses. I enjoyed them and will probably enroll in more courses soon.
Like any degree or certificate., they won’t get you the job but it does help you learn and it’s a good talking point. These certificates are good to add to any resume and it shows that you care about improving your skills and staying up to date.
then how do i get a job? everyone asks for experience where am I support to get that experience?
Can you write out the names of the certificates listed best to not best somewhere? My auditory software can't pick up the images at 15:39 . Please that would make your well thought out presentation much more accessible to people who use accessibility software. Thank you.
It would be really helpful if you keep the tier list on the screen and use the titles of the certificates instead of those photos. Otherwise a very informative video! Thank you!
it would be useful if you place the name of the course in the tierlist, the images are not descriptive
I took my like back because of that
Professional guilds, job examinations and certification, and regulation of entry into controlled professions are activities nearly five thousand years old. The modern twist on it is the proliferation of types as recruiting tools, with the certificate analogous to a buffet menu inviting the candidate to keep eating to satiation and beyond.
Entry level marketing may pay peanuts, but if you get the skills and connections to start your own agency, you'll blow by what the others are making and have the freedom of no 9-5.
How much is considered peanuts?
This dude is giving away life insight
Google also just released their advanced data analytics certificate!
Just a warning for those who have no background in project management but your thinking of getting a certification. I have a bachelor's degree in project management, and I am constantly getting spammed by recruiters who want a PM for things that are in no way related to my skillset or resume. The recruiters are simply doing a keyword search and then spamming thousands of us with the words "project management" on our resume, linkedin profiles, etc. Honestly i was getting so many garbage reqs that were in no way related to my skillset that I removed all references to PM from my online profiles.
I rarely comment on videos but this video was completely helpful and eye-opening. Thank you! Longtime subscriber of your channel, love what you do sir.
Incredible video, mate. I can verify about half of what you said, I've no doubt about the rest. Heading to the things I did not know about. Thanks!
Thanks for watching!
Hey @Shane Hummus! Watching your vid, I wanted to let you know that with the META social media marketing certification, I got a door to door sales role first and after some experience I’m now working at Google! Def worth it just more of a “soft skill” and it’s good for entrepreneurs. Thanks :)
I've been in IT for over 25 years. This smells like bullshit and is giving noobs unrealistic salary expectations right out of the gate.
If you are starting out, you better know the basics before starting this stuff. CompTIA stuff. Linux, Networking, A+... understand what the stuff you will be building, runs on.
That can get you on to a help desk. Now you need to grind and shine. Find an area in the company that interests you, and start studies to build skills in that direction.
Next step afaic is either cloud or security. Those will provide a full career. I went into VOIP 15 years ago. Dumb idea, got out. Dead end. Security and off-site computing will never end.
That means certification up the Security track, you learn to pen test etc. For cloud Azure or AWS cert is the way to go. But they'll be hard to understand without the underpinning of the CompTIA learning.
The G certs don't pass the shite smell test. And what's with the subscription? To keep the cert active? Absolute bullshit if that's the case.
The problem is that these certifications although valuable still require real time work experience especially in Canada. I searched for many Project Manager roles and most of them require previous work experience even at entry level.
I've been told to apply to those kinds of ads anyway. They usually are very hopeful when they write the ads.
You should start as a project coordinator rather than a project manager if you are entry level.
"Data is more valuable than oil or gold"
Gold? sure. Oil? Hell no.
I have a Google "Project Management" certificate. This is a 6 certificate regarding project management. It took me 5 months. The knowledge from this training helps me a lot in my work.
You guys I just finished the Google Data Analytics Certificate and I didn’t pay a dime. Take advantage of the financial aid. I got it for all 8 courses. I got full aid but they can give a certain percentage off
What do you think about Googles Digital Marketing Certificate? Do you think it’s a good course and you could get a job in Digital Marketing? Love your channel and keep up the good work!
I STARTED IT TODAY BRO,so far looks good,but not sure if thats the best pick or if it will help me for a job as i dont have other digital experiences.
If you're relatively young without obligations, don't pay attention to what he said about salaries or open positions, that's rat race thinking.
First of all there's an endless sea of demand for (effective) content, 2nd if you get the right skills and connections you can freelance or even start your own agency and not only make more than the 9-5 salary jobs, you'll have more freedom (and fun IMO, I'm tech savvy but I don't enjoy working with tech like I do the creative aspects of copywriting/marketing).
It's not hard to get started, write some engaging copy like a good cold outreach email or show some SEO optimizations and business owners will want your help. If you get stuck, gpt can do about anything now with the right prompt.
Just the video I was looking for - thank you!
I was awarded a scholarship to take all of them. I have finished Project Management and I am half way through data analytics.
I recieved my scholarship from a female empowerment group I am in. But Coursera has financial and full scholarships.
Thank you for this
As someone who cares nothing for tech I might throw on the social media marketing and project management ones just to expand my portfolio and skill set.
I have over 10 years work experience as a Project Coordinator. Many employers are looking for ppl with Data Analytics education/experience on top of having admin and project coordination skills. The cert can easily supplement work experience in admin or pc.
I got the IBM Cybersecurity Analyst cert to complement my software engineering experience; I think for that purpose it is an excellent one. I can see it not being a great pick for someone trying to get entry level access to a career though and I wouldn't want to be a "cybersecurity analyst" even if it doubled my pay.
Agreed. The certifications are great for adding a dash of spice to your resume. Also, if you graduated from a pretty generic degree or diploma (let's say B.S. IT or B.S. Business mgt with no particular major), a series of certifications and skill sets related to your targeted specialization can give you advantage over others during the initial hiring phase/resume review.
I agree, most certificates are trash, and a waste of time.
But the google certificates, IBM, meta and so on, those have "some weight" and look good on your CV/linkedIn.
I never put certifications from udemy and even from coursera on my profile but google/ibm stuff is gold, still less valuable than a portefolio and proctorade exams/degree.
Great video, just name the courses on the tier list, so we can know what it is, it's kinda hard to recognise with just photos.
This is super motivating and helpful.
I am getting the company I work for to assist me financially with the data analytics course! I have no scientific background but I somehow landed a position as a monitoring specialist. I love it so far and data analysis would help me step up and it's totally my kind of stuff! Good to know I am on the right track!
This was such a great ranking. So informative. Thanks so much!
Thanks for watching!
Hey Shane! Great video :) you didn't rate the Google IT Support cert... what tier would you rank it? Thanks!!
There’s also Google Coursera E-Commerce and Digital Marketing certification!
Need your review on the new Advanced Google Data Analytics course, I'm almost done with the Google Data Analytics course.. I am interested in the new course as it covers Python and Statistics.
The new course is wonderful, I am currently on it, a bit challenging though, but I love it. I think you should go ahead
Highly recommended. And I agree with the previous comment; the stats, regression and ML segments are challenging but stick with it and you'll get through.
Meta certificate from Coursera great for beginner and give the basics, but Meta make changes too often so course need to be updated.but the plus of this course that you can take a meta certified exam and get a badge for your cv.
So in order to read your Tier list when it's up on screen we have to memorize the stock photo thumbnails and which course they correspond to? lol. Good video but cmon bro.
Was thinking the same
If you don’t watch the video then it is you don’t hear the rating for each course
Entry levels jobs in LinkedIn are not entry level, a lot ask for 5+ or 3+ years of experience
This is very helpful! I'm interested in transitioning into tech but I want to pursue an area with a low learning curve and is also not too saturated.
I just completed the Google Data Analytics certificate. Overall, I was satisfied, but as a former Math instructor I think there is room for improvement as far as format of the course goes. I feel they can make it more interactive and also walk learners through a case study from beginning to completion.
I'm still stuck with the Case study. Also, I didn't feel confident after completing the course since you really have to put everything to practice to connect with it.
Also, it's true what you mentioned where more skills need to be acquired. I already enrolled in a SQL class with UC Davis.
IT Support Certification, I have already done .Almost finish with Data Analytics and Cybersecurity. But yes still need also learn a lot and practice alot those skills .!! thanks alot mam for ur video ❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉
Way to go!
100% take these courses. I work in IT and the topics are on point for skills needed to survive
Hi, George! Thanks for the support.
@@ShaneHummus mmmmm hummus.... I think its lunch time
@@GhostKingGeorge😂😂😂 Pitaaaa... We need the bread
In Russia big companies cooperate with big universities, create new programs, courses, departments and even faculties. I believe, it may be a good aproach too, as it is easier to adapt and improve something rather than start something from scratch
For example, Tinkoff, Yandex, VK and Avito have their own schools in analytics, data science and big data infrastucture
Tinkoff creates its own university with 2-year masters-like program in Data Science. Yandex cooperates with different universities. Like Tinkoff, ABBYY, Sber, etc, Yandex has its own department in MIPT. Last two years in bachelor in MIPT student can spend in Data Analysis department of Yandex, take different courses in Statistics, NLP, CV, RL, Go, Bayesian Statistics, etc, and write bachelor thesis with specialist in Yandex
In HSE Yandex funded Faculty of Computer Science, and lots of winners of school student olympiads in math and programming go there
its super worth knowing that Google IT Support Pro cert qualifies you to enroll in IT paths at WGU
Thank you!
What are your opinions on the Google E-commerce And Digital Marketing Certificate?
You are like a breath of fresh air in a collapsing system.
Thanks! I appreciate it.
Thank you for this video! Very informative!
Glad it was helpful!
Will a degree or certificate teach you everything you need to know at Company X. No. But companies will see that you are trying to learn, or have learned, what they have in demand. And that can get you hired. Even when you graduate with a Masters Degree, you still have to learn how Company X does their thing, their vibe, company lingo, and company culture. But having a good cert and a good attitude can definitely get your foot in the door.
Interns should *always* get paid. If you are talking to a hiring manager or someone in the interview process and they say that for X amount of time as an intern you don't get paid while you're "learning" -- run, quickly, and find a decent company.
Also good to start the interview process with "Is this the kind of company" or "Is this the kind of team" I want to be a part of. You are interviewing them -- not the other way around.
Hey Shane! Came here today, after getting an email for a new Google Cyber Security Certification. Can you make a video on what you think of it?
I really love your editing style with the memes
Great Video. Thanks!
I've been thinking on getting a coursera account for a while now. Since I currently live in Iran and there are some restrictions on the payments which I can get or give and also we have the sanctions on us I don't know how's that gonna work out for me personally. But your video gave me a pretty good vision and I'm thankful for that! ❤
Thank you for watching, Pash! Good luck.
Actual Title: "Google Certificate Tier List" ---- Better Title: "Coursera Course Tier List"
Hey Shane, I just stumbled upon your channel and wanted to say I'm enjoying all your videos. I also would like to share my concern for your shoulder joint and muscles for holding that Tea Cup in the same hand video after video. Balance out those arm muscles! ;-)
10:09 lol they aren't just names dude, they're entirely different fields of study within IT. That's like saying there are a bunch of names for doctors. Like no, they're specialist in their field.
I have taken the Google IT Certification program and it is nice complement with Comptia
A+ Certification. Now it won't get you a job but help get an Interview.
How does this work which students who are over 50 please answer I'm planning on studying for these and I am 54 years old
My goals for two of these certificates a two things
Enhance my skills to run and operate my buisiness venture then upgrade for a job but
Abit of insider knowlage here.
I work for a nonprofit that partnered with Google to offered the Google IT Support cert and when this course is offered as a physical programs that offers the Google IT cert they often ether have funding and an agreement with the government or direct partnership with google. Often beyond just offering the class they are required to hire a percentage of students that complete the cert.
men thanks a lot to you , you are like my monday newspaper to know latest information. keep up the awesomely great work
The pic at the end needs the name of the certs. I don’t wanna skip all around the video to figure out my own summary after watching it
Hi shane and community,
I’m currently going into my second year of college and had been doing a personal project in mobile detailing for about 3 years. I built everything from the UI to the website (albeit in squarespace). I am currently a MIS major and have marketing as a minor, but despite this I feel a great insecurity in regards to not knowing nearly enough software. I have a couple of great opportunities some people in my network have offered me but I feel vastly under qualified (anywhere from building an airbnb style sharing platform to hard coded websites). With this being said I’m thinking about either completely changing my major to Computer IS or going double (and try not to kill myself).
I also want to see how valuable it would be to certify myself in some of these Google certifications and how they compare to LinkedIn ones too. But as of now like Shane said in the video I feel overloaded and overwhelmed with choices and idek what I personally want to do
Thank you for the help, great video
Wait he didn’t even rank the last cert on his tier list
S tier
Just do it, if you want to try IT
i subscribed instantly, its full of feel.
Shane! Can you make a video of a list of best jobs/ careers that aren’t 9-5?!
Exactly atleast for those who want to enjoy their life at best
Definitely have paralysis analysis cause I’m like where do I want to pivot into PMP DA BA Cyber UI UX LMNOPQRS! 😂 Glad I found you but Help!!