Hot tech certifications in a cool job market
- 25 November, 2008 09:28
- Comments 1
If the doomsayers prove right, throngs of laid-off tech workers will soon be competing for only a handful of available jobs. Technical certifications, once thought to be the ticket to higher pay and more prestige, may be needed to simply avoid the unemployment line. The trick is to get the ones that will really help keep or land that job, since it turns out many certifications won't be all that useful.
So what are the hottest tech certifications in today's cool job market? According to a Foote Partners survey of more than 22,000 IT professionals, covering some 170 certifications, the most valuable certificates today settle mainly into two camps: architecture and security. Microsoft and Cisco certifications also got good grades.
In terms of pay growth, here are the top five certifications, according to Foote Partners:
- IT Certified Architect (ITCA/OPenGroup)
- Certified Information Security Manager (CISM)
- InfoSys Security Architecture Professional (ISSAP/CISSP)
- Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator: Messaging (MCSA)
- Cisco Certified Network Professional (CCNP)
Good architecture equals real tech savings
As the economic crisis has deepened, good enterprise architects have become treasured assets. In fact, over the last six months, seven of the eight fastest-growing certificates are for enterprise architecture, which barely registered a blip a year ago, says David Foote, president of Foote Partners. "One of the things you invest in during tough times is architects," he says, "because if you want to save money, you have to architect carefully."
Certification plays well in areas that are grand in scope (and thus ill-defined), business-critical, and chock-full of complexity. Experience varies from enterprise architect to enterprise architect. Job histories on résumés can be exaggerated or even contain outright lies. Enterprise architecture certifications, on the other hand, "bring industrial strength" to the résumé and can be more easily confirmed, says Carole Schlocker, who runs iSpace, a technical staffing firm.
Enterprise architects are "abstract thinkers at the design level, almost like business analysts," says Foote. They transcend technology and cross into the business realm. Indeed, many tech workers aspire to journey down this path, and a certification can show that they are making progress.
Hiring managers, too, want to see more than just technical chops from job candidates. "They're looking for people who are good thinkers, have a feel for what goes on in other parts of the business, and understand how IT can be integrated," says Jerry Luftman, vice president at the Society for Information Management. "They want people with a holistic view." (Luftman is also associate dean of graduate information systems at Stevens Institute of Technology, which offers a dozen credentialed IT-business programs, such as IT for financial services, IT for health care, and IT for outsourcing.)
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Comments
yuiogyuitfy
It is just sad that there are lots of people today that are unemployed because they have been affected of the economic crisis that our country is facing. The economic forecast calls for more people getting payday loans and general doom and gloom. It isn't surprising. It is all we've been hearing for months. But it doesn't change the forecast for unemployment to rise another percentage point or two by year's end. That works out to about another 5 or 6 million workers no longer working, and needing payday loans. The rate is thus far at over 7%, the highest in decades, with nearly 700,000 people collecting unemployment benefits. The estimate is that the recession will begin sorting itself out by 2010 at the earliest. We all might need <a href="http://personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/02/19/unemployment-at-record-high-payday-loans-cant-curb-joblessness/">payday loans</a> before then.
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