Great Explanation! I have the SAA, DVA, 2 months seems enough for it, I am planning to give the sysops as well simultaneously , thanks for the huge help.
Thanks for sharing your experiences with taking this certification. I have three AWS associate-level certifications and plan to take this new one next month. Hello from Brazil.
Hey Congrats man and Yes Stephanne is an awesome instructor. Im working on Azure now but when I get ready for AWS again gonna use his material. Good luck, love hearing good news like this. Inspiring.
very useful tips!! I will definitely go to the test center to take the exam, that was something I was always thinking too, maybe I had to hear it from you!!
So glad you found it useful! Testing centers, I believe, are much better testing environments - especially if you have too many distractions at home in the office 😉
Great tips! I'm planning to pass this exam in the near future. Although I really like stephane, his DOP course didn't dive deep enough into the level of detail required by this exam...
Thank you! You will definitely pass this exam… in fact, you will ace it! 🙌🏽🙌🏽 If Stephane’s course didn’t help, I’d recommend Adrian or ACG as an alternative. Also, it would be wise to leverage TutorialsDojo as much as possible to help fill those gaps in knowledge. ☺️ You got this! 💪🏾🔥
Yep, Seem true to me, i was planning to I will take the exam after a month, but honestly, the knowledge is way too much that I can not handle easily within a month while I don't work directly with AWS daily xD
Thanks for the video! I'm finishing my studies to become a Data Engineer Associate. I already have a DVA and SAA. Would you recommend Security first or DOP?
Hello, Sebas here, I am also for DevOps. I had some questions, why not recommend the SysOps Admin certification? I was listening carefully to the services you recommended to study a little more, and I dealt with most of them in SysOps, to face DevOps, wouldn't SysOps or Dev be more appropriate?🤔
Hello Sebas! First off, thanks for watching the video and your support! 😄🤗 To answer the first part of your question: So I've heard some folks recommend that you take the SysOps Administrator before you sit for this exam since some of the services you encounter would be featured on the exam. Also, I haven't taken the SysOps Administrator, which is part of the reason why I did not mention that in my video. I have taken both the Solutions Architect and Developer Associate exams, and I did see a bit of overlap in featured services! To answer the second part of your question: I personally believe the Developer Associate is more appropriate due to my testing experience. Most of the services from the Developer Associate were featured on this exam and that foundational knowledge will come in handy.
I think this is one of those situations where it depends on the person taking the exam. For me, I have a large developer background and some AWS experience. But my system administration experience is far less. So I’m thinking I need to spend more time on the systems certification courses to do better on the exam. How I would diagnose this is take the sample test and based on the sample tests look at the items that you’re getting wrong and research what domain they are from: developer, systems ops, architecture. then yeah you should take those courses, read articles, dojo, etc.
Thanks for your honesty about how much time you spent to prepare. So many people pass and then say they didn’t study or put as many hours in to preparation as they actually did. I think it’s important to let people know how much time they need to commit as well as the study materials used so that they are prepared and have the best chance of passing the exam.
@@damienjburks Tanx for the reply. I have a doubt. I just completed AWS SAA of stephenes course. And also checking out Serverless part of his developer associate course. I find that, it wil not b adequate for AWS Developer- DevOps job roles. Can u suggest any specific AWS Serverless course for me to get a grip on?
@@manojkumar-jt3fw You'll actually want to do some labs and build a portfolio. I recommend you use Whizlabs for this; more courses won't prepare you for a job. You'll need to get hands-on experience by practicing.
Thank you for this! I’m inspired to take it ! This helped!
Thank YOU for watching! Glad I've inspired you! You got this 💪
Great Explanation! I have the SAA, DVA, 2 months seems enough for it, I am planning to give the sysops as well simultaneously , thanks for the huge help.
I appreciate it! Thanks for watching! You’re going to ace this cert!!! 🙌🏽🙌🏽
@@damienjburks Thank you for all your Guidance! Passed the Sysops Exam!! 😀
@@dipanjanray4725 💪💪💪 LETS GOOOOO!!!!
Thanks for sharing your experiences with taking this certification.
I have three AWS associate-level certifications and plan to take this new one next month.
Hello from Brazil.
Thank you for your support! Good luck with your exam - I know you’ll ace it! ☺️
Great overview thank you!
Thanks for watching! Really appreciate it!
Hey Congrats man and Yes Stephanne is an awesome instructor. Im working on Azure now but when I get ready for AWS again gonna use his material. Good luck, love hearing good news like this. Inspiring.
Thank you so much! I appreciate the support! ☺️ Stephane is the BEST!!!
Azure is on my list; feel free to let me know what study material you use! ☺️
Nice breakdown and highlight of your experience! Great tips to avoid a headache after the exam. Keep it up, Damien! 🙌
Thank you so much for the support! Really appreciate it 💛😁
very useful tips!!
I will definitely go to the test center to take the exam, that was something I was always thinking too, maybe I had to hear it from you!!
So glad you found it useful! Testing centers, I believe, are much better testing environments - especially if you have too many distractions at home in the office 😉
Great tips! I'm planning to pass this exam in the near future. Although I really like stephane, his DOP course didn't dive deep enough into the level of detail required by this exam...
Thank you! You will definitely pass this exam… in fact, you will ace it! 🙌🏽🙌🏽
If Stephane’s course didn’t help, I’d recommend Adrian or ACG as an alternative. Also, it would be wise to leverage TutorialsDojo as much as possible to help fill those gaps in knowledge. ☺️
You got this! 💪🏾🔥
Yep, Seem true to me, i was planning to I will take the exam after a month, but honestly, the knowledge is way too much that I can not handle easily within a month while I don't work directly with AWS daily xD
Yeaaaahhh it’s a beast of an exam! Interact with AWS daily and I think a month is too soon. You made the right choice 🤗
Hey Damien. Thanks for sharing these useful tips for this exam! I am starting this journey to get this hard exam.
Greeting from down here in Brazil.
✌
Glad you found this video helpful Bruno! You’ll for sure ace this exam 😄
Thanks for the video! I'm finishing my studies to become a Data Engineer Associate. I already have a DVA and SAA. Would you recommend Security first or DOP?
I’d recommend the security first before DOP!
@@damienjburksThank you, and again congratulations on your work here on UA-cam!
@@WalaceAlvesDaSilva-z9m you're welcome! Keep on going!
very useful! Subscribed
Thank you so much!!! Means a lot 💛☺️
Ty thanks alot
You're welcome! Happy to help! 😄
Hello, Sebas here, I am also for DevOps. I had some questions, why not recommend the SysOps Admin certification? I was listening carefully to the services you recommended to study a little more, and I dealt with most of them in SysOps, to face DevOps, wouldn't SysOps or Dev be more appropriate?🤔
Hello Sebas! First off, thanks for watching the video and your support! 😄🤗
To answer the first part of your question: So I've heard some folks recommend that you take the SysOps Administrator before you sit for this exam since some of the services you encounter would be featured on the exam. Also, I haven't taken the SysOps Administrator, which is part of the reason why I did not mention that in my video. I have taken both the Solutions Architect and Developer Associate exams, and I did see a bit of overlap in featured services!
To answer the second part of your question: I personally believe the Developer Associate is more appropriate due to my testing experience. Most of the services from the Developer Associate were featured on this exam and that foundational knowledge will come in handy.
I think this is one of those situations where it depends on the person taking the exam. For me, I have a large developer background and some AWS experience. But my system administration experience is far less. So I’m thinking I need to spend more time on the systems certification courses to do better on the exam. How I would diagnose this is take the sample test and based on the sample tests look at the items that you’re getting wrong and research what domain they are from: developer, systems ops, architecture. then yeah you should take those courses, read articles, dojo, etc.
Thanks, Damien for sharing your knowledge!
@@scifithoughts3611 I love the perspective you’ve shared. Thank you so much for supporting the video and commenting below with your thoughts. 😁
Thanks for your honesty about how much time you spent to prepare. So many people pass and then say they didn’t study or put as many hours in to preparation as they actually did. I think it’s important to let people know how much time they need to commit as well as the study materials used so that they are prepared and have the best chance of passing the exam.
U did AWS SAA , AWS Developer Associate & AWS Security Specialist first. And then u did AWS Devoleper Professional ???? is that the right order
Thanks for supporting the channel!
Here is the correct order: DVA (Developer), SAA (Solutions), SCS (Security), and then DOP (DevOps).
@@damienjburks Tanx for the reply.
I have a doubt. I just completed AWS SAA of stephenes course. And also checking out Serverless part of his developer associate course. I find that, it wil not b adequate for AWS Developer- DevOps job roles. Can u suggest any specific AWS Serverless course for me to get a grip on?
@@manojkumar-jt3fw You'll actually want to do some labs and build a portfolio. I recommend you use Whizlabs for this; more courses won't prepare you for a job. You'll need to get hands-on experience by practicing.