Crosswords1 min ago
It training deals
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.From what I've read, the kind of deal you mention (do 4k course and they get you into a job) is DODGY and many people have been left out of pocket and jobless. There's no magic way to pay your way in. You'd be better off going back to full-time study (HND or a post grad qual in an IT discipline) and trying to get some experience somewhere on the back of that. Experience is essential unless you start as a junior/trainee.
Alternatively, get a telesales/customer care job in an IT-based company, do a part-time IT course and then apply for a suitable internal vacancy (I have seen this happen where I work - from customer care to training, testing, first line support etc). Once you are part of a company, you have the advantage of being able to apply for such vacancies before they go public.
Worth a try perhaps?
Yeah, I agree. A friend of mine who has a PhD went a bit mental when I started even comparing professional uni qualifications with 'Certification' handed out by lots of dodgy companies. He did give a reason though. He said that if you do a formal course, say in programming, you may never use that language again, but you will have been taught the framework around which an employer can train you again in the future. With a 'certification' you get instant info but with no structure, and thus in the long term employers just can't use it.
Personally, and I did work in IT a bit myself, I would get someone else to pay for your formal training. The way to do this is to probably start in IT in a very basic or support to support role, then 'ask' a company to pay for your training. The money needed is often relatively little to companies, they stand to get some governmental reimbursement, and they have a good chance of having a well-qualified IT employee on their books. Good IT support pays for itself several times over.
I agree that your overall strategy of diverging into IT in your situation sounds good. Get the hell out of telesales. It'll start to damage your CV after a while. And it will kill your soul. Apologies to anyone reading this who is in telesales.
Joskos is the company, yeah its an mcse then, ccna, then either mcdst or mcdba, all for 3149, local colleges or online courses are much cheaper, what im worried about is im gonna pay all this money, be out of work for 3 - 4 months, includes a placement in a nhs trust for a few weeks, then i'll get a 18k helpdesk role, is there much progression in this field? if i do a self taugh course i have th eproblem of a paper qualification and no real experience 18months that most people require.