you can cover the basics and testking the rest but as i said - i'm not letting a n00b ccna near any gear - it would be an entry "watch only" training position - which to be honest - there is a glutton of folks who knows their networking (ccna or not) - so yeah experience counts.
Tons of jobless folks who have 10 years experience in a datacenter dealing with networking - and that comes with more than just a ccna. can you facilitate everything necessary to pull a (DS1,DS3,OC3)? contract, ip's, dns, provisioning of physical, router config best practice, follow up testing etc. ? firewall/switching/IPS?
Tons of people that can "handle it" from start to finish. I don't think they teach you all aspects with just one cert. Hell i've seen some folks that claimed to be CCIE that didn't even know how to handle BGP4 in a simple dual-homed dual-router cisco setup. Which is pretty textbook simple (dude didn't know how big two full routing tables were and tried to run it on an old pair of SP that had 90% of the ram necessary). After some serious flapping and having to force down an interface so claimed CCIE had to phone home for help. fortunately they had a single SP with enough ram so we just ran on a single router for a bit of time. Of course the CCIE didn't check the revisions of the ATM and ethernet ports so his new router processor wouldn't accept the old revision boards (epic fail to not check firmware and hardware revisions before attempting upgrade).
Needless to say i've been jaded with expensive CCIE's - i think most of them don't pimp themselves out these days.
CCDA (ccna+ccda + specialization) = guaranteed job - even if you don't work.

called pimping your certs out. If you are going to be book smart - do the CCDA+CCNA+some specialization tracks - you will be worth money to resellers with zero need for actual work.