Originally posted by: spidey07
4 year degree or master plus experience goes a long way.
ccie is still a great cert and hard to get for sure, but they don't demand that salaries they used to (late 90s/early 2000/2001) there are so many of them now.
Originally posted by: spidey07
4 year degree or master plus experience goes a long way.
ccie is still a great cert and hard to get for sure, but they don't demand that salaries they used to (late 90s/early 2000/2001) there are so many of them now.
Originally posted by: AmphibSailor
Originally posted by: spidey07
4 year degree or master plus experience goes a long way.
ccie is still a great cert and hard to get for sure, but they don't demand that salaries they used to (late 90s/early 2000/2001) there are so many of them now.
😱
There is money to be made with the CCIE. In late June, just before this thread started, I heard about an opening for a CCIE with a starting salary of over $300,000. The big catch was that it was in the middle east.
Originally posted by: RedCOMET
Originally posted by: AmphibSailor
Originally posted by: spidey07
4 year degree or master plus experience goes a long way.
ccie is still a great cert and hard to get for sure, but they don't demand that salaries they used to (late 90s/early 2000/2001) there are so many of them now.
😱
There is money to be made with the CCIE. In late June, just before this thread started, I heard about an opening for a CCIE with a starting salary of over $300,000. The big catch was that it was in the middle east.
Just curious, was the gig for a whole year? I've heard of some people talk of jobs in the middle east for X months for a pretty good salary.
Just curious, was the gig for a whole year? I've heard of some people talk of jobs in the middle east for X months for a pretty good salary.
Originally posted by: polm
I'm really not sure how important the college degree really is, unless you are completely new to the field and have no past experience. I had to work my way from PC Tech -> NT Admin -> Unix Admin -> Network Analyst (cisco, nortel, etc.) but it was worth it considering I had no degree.
Originally posted by: brockj
Originally posted by: polm
I'm really not sure how important the college degree really is, unless you are completely new to the field and have no past experience. I had to work my way from PC Tech -> NT Admin -> Unix Admin -> Network Analyst (cisco, nortel, etc.) but it was worth it considering I had no degree.
Same thing here, sometimes you have to just work your way up. Get your foot in the door at a good company and they will pay for you to get all the certs and education (aside from at least a BS). Not the case for everyone, but quite a few that I know.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: brockj
Originally posted by: polm
I'm really not sure how important the college degree really is, unless you are completely new to the field and have no past experience. I had to work my way from PC Tech -> NT Admin -> Unix Admin -> Network Analyst (cisco, nortel, etc.) but it was worth it considering I had no degree.
Same thing here, sometimes you have to just work your way up. Get your foot in the door at a good company and they will pay for you to get all the certs and education (aside from at least a BS). Not the case for everyone, but quite a few that I know.
thing is you will hit a ceiling very early without a degree and won't be able to move forward.
Originally posted by: polm
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: brockj
Originally posted by: polm
I'm really not sure how important the college degree really is, unless you are completely new to the field and have no past experience. I had to work my way from PC Tech -> NT Admin -> Unix Admin -> Network Analyst (cisco, nortel, etc.) but it was worth it considering I had no degree.
Same thing here, sometimes you have to just work your way up. Get your foot in the door at a good company and they will pay for you to get all the certs and education (aside from at least a BS). Not the case for everyone, but quite a few that I know.
thing is you will hit a ceiling very early without a degree and won't be able to move forward.
6+ years in the field and I've yet to hit a "ceiling". I continue to progress year after year.
I work with plenty of highly paid network guys who have been working for a while with no degree and no ceiling.
I could see the degree being important when you want to move into management, or into extremely high end engineering.
Most of the time the "BS required..." is outweighed by the "...or equivalent experience".
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: polm
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: brockj
Originally posted by: polm
I'm really not sure how important the college degree really is, unless you are completely new to the field and have no past experience. I had to work my way from PC Tech -> NT Admin -> Unix Admin -> Network Analyst (cisco, nortel, etc.) but it was worth it considering I had no degree.
Same thing here, sometimes you have to just work your way up. Get your foot in the door at a good company and they will pay for you to get all the certs and education (aside from at least a BS). Not the case for everyone, but quite a few that I know.
thing is you will hit a ceiling very early without a degree and won't be able to move forward.
6+ years in the field and I've yet to hit a "ceiling". I continue to progress year after year.
I work with plenty of highly paid network guys who have been working for a while with no degree and no ceiling.
I could see the degree being important when you want to move into management, or into extremely high end engineering.
Most of the time the "BS required..." is outweighed by the "...or equivalent experience".
You are not at the ceiling yet. Usually happens around early 30s with 10 years experience or so.
I also know a lot of network guys that say "man, worst mistake I ever made was not get a degree...now I'm stuck doing this the rest of my life making the same wage" Its still decent money, but can't get any more raises because they maxed out the position. To make any more they would have to be a manager.
But they don't have a degree...so can't be manager...stuck.
Originally posted by: polm
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: polm
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: brockj
Originally posted by: polm
I'm really not sure how important the college degree really is, unless you are completely new to the field and have no past experience. I had to work my way from PC Tech -> NT Admin -> Unix Admin -> Network Analyst (cisco, nortel, etc.) but it was worth it considering I had no degree.
Same thing here, sometimes you have to just work your way up. Get your foot in the door at a good company and they will pay for you to get all the certs and education (aside from at least a BS). Not the case for everyone, but quite a few that I know.
thing is you will hit a ceiling very early without a degree and won't be able to move forward.
6+ years in the field and I've yet to hit a "ceiling". I continue to progress year after year.
I work with plenty of highly paid network guys who have been working for a while with no degree and no ceiling.
I could see the degree being important when you want to move into management, or into extremely high end engineering.
Most of the time the "BS required..." is outweighed by the "...or equivalent experience".
You are not at the ceiling yet. Usually happens around early 30s with 10 years experience or so.
I also know a lot of network guys that say "man, worst mistake I ever made was not get a degree...now I'm stuck doing this the rest of my life making the same wage" Its still decent money, but can't get any more raises because they maxed out the position. To make any more they would have to be a manager.
But they don't have a degree...so can't be manager...stuck.
I totally see your point. I guess I'm still at an age (26) where I feel like I would never want to be a manager.
I always hoped that I could acheive a mastery of the field, get my CCIE, and remain a well-payed technician for the rest of my life.
Originally posted by: polm
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: polm
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: brockj
Originally posted by: polm
I'm really not sure how important the college degree really is, unless you are completely new to the field and have no past experience. I had to work my way from PC Tech -> NT Admin -> Unix Admin -> Network Analyst (cisco, nortel, etc.) but it was worth it considering I had no degree.
Same thing here, sometimes you have to just work your way up. Get your foot in the door at a good company and they will pay for you to get all the certs and education (aside from at least a BS). Not the case for everyone, but quite a few that I know.
thing is you will hit a ceiling very early without a degree and won't be able to move forward.
6+ years in the field and I've yet to hit a "ceiling". I continue to progress year after year.
I work with plenty of highly paid network guys who have been working for a while with no degree and no ceiling.
I could see the degree being important when you want to move into management, or into extremely high end engineering.
Most of the time the "BS required..." is outweighed by the "...or equivalent experience".
You are not at the ceiling yet. Usually happens around early 30s with 10 years experience or so.
I also know a lot of network guys that say "man, worst mistake I ever made was not get a degree...now I'm stuck doing this the rest of my life making the same wage" Its still decent money, but can't get any more raises because they maxed out the position. To make any more they would have to be a manager.
But they don't have a degree...so can't be manager...stuck.
I totally see your point. I guess I'm still at an age (26) where I feel like I would never want to be a manager.
I always hoped that I could acheive a mastery of the field, get my CCIE, and remain a well-payed technician for the rest of my life.
Originally posted by: polm
One of my major concerns is the fact that I'm on call, for the most part, 24/7/365.
I could be in the middle of an exam, and if the %&$# is hitting the fan, my company will expect me to drop everything.