Cisco Training Around The UK Considered

by Jason Kendall

CCNA is the way to go for training in Cisco. This will enable you to work on the maintenance and installation of routers and network switches. The internet is made up of many routers, and large companies that have various regional departments use them to allow their networks of computers to communicate.

It's vital that you already know a good deal about how computer networks operate and function, because computer networks are joined to routers. If not, the chances are you'll fall behind. Better to look for a course covering the basics in networking (maybe the CompTIA Network+, possibly with A+ as well) and then do a CCNA course. Look for a training provider that can offer this as a career package.

We'd recommend a bespoke training program that will take you through a specific training path before starting your Cisco CCNA course skills.

Typically, a new trainee will not know to ask about something that can make a profound difference to their results - how their company divides up the training materials, and into what particular chunks.

Students often think it makes sense (with most training taking 1-3 years to gain full certified status,) that a training provider will issue a single section at a time, as you pass each element. However:

It's not unusual for trainees to realise that their providers 'standard' path of training is not what they would prefer. It's often the case that a different order of study is more expedient. Perhaps you don't make it in the allotted time?

An ideal situation would be to have all your study materials sent to your home before you even start; the entire package! Then, nothing can hinder your progress.

Exam 'guarantees' are sometimes offered as part of a training package - they always involve paying for the exam fees up-front, before you've even made a start on the course. Before you jump at this so-called guarantee, look at the following:

In this day and age, we tend to be a little more 'marketing-savvy' - and generally we know that for sure it is something we're paying for - it's not because they're so generous they want to give something away!

If you want to qualify first 'go', then you should avoid exam guarantees and pay when entering exams, give it the priority it deserves and be ready for the task.

Does it really add up to pay a training company at the start of the course for exams? Go for the best offer when you take the exam, instead of paying any mark-up - and do it locally - rather than possibly hours away from your area.

Why borrow the money or pay in advance (plus interest of course) on exams when you didn't need to? A great deal of money is netted by organisations charging all their exam fees up-front - and banking on the fact that many won't be taken.

The majority of companies will insist on pre-tests and prohibit you from re-taking an exam until you've completely proven that you're likely to pass - so an 'Exam Guarantee' comes with many clauses in reality.

Exam fees averaged approximately 112 pounds last year through local VUE or Pro-metric centres throughout the country. So why pay hundreds or thousands of pounds extra to get 'Exam Guarantees', when it's obvious that the most successful method is a commitment to studying and the use of authorised exam preparation tools.

Make sure that all your accreditations are current and commercially required - forget courses which end up with a useless in-house certificate or plaque.

The top IT companies such as Microsoft, Adobe, CompTIA or Cisco have widely recognised skills programmes. Huge conglomerates such as these can make sure you stand out at interview.

Massive developments are about to hit technology as we approach the second decade of the 21st century - and it becomes more and more thrilling each day.

We are really only just starting to understand how this will truly impact our way of life. How we communicate and interact with everyone around us will be significantly affected by computers and the web.

And don't forget that on average, the income of a person in the IT market in the United Kingdom is a lot greater than the national average salary, therefore you will probably gain much more in the IT sector, than you'd get in most other industries.

Due to the technological sector increasing nationally and internationally, one can predict that the requirement for professionally qualified and skilled IT workers will remain buoyant for quite some time to come.

(C) Jason Kendall. Go to LearningLolly.com for quality career advice on Cisco CCNA Certification and Cisco CCNA Training Course.

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