Vendor certs will always help more than non vendor certs.
They are known organizations and being recognized by them
stands out. Remember, the average recruiter is generally
not a technical person that uses those skills. The
recruiter that selects your resume just knows the buzzwords
to look for. I can guess that the average response might
be.
"oh.. LPI certified.. hrm... interesting... OH hey this
guy has his RHCE, he's redhat certified I know them."
Still the more things you list on your resume, the better.
Buzzwords. Yay for being your own personal sales person.
(This is not to say that a resume should not have technical
information as well, but you need to cater to both the
technical readers and non technical readers.)
---
Terry Zink
RHCE
Logicworks
________________________________________
From: redhat-list-bounces redhat.com
[redhat-list-bounces redhat.com] On Behalf Of inode0
[inode0 gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2007 1:33 PM
To: General Red Hat Linux discussion list
Subject: Re: RHCE and other certs?
On 4/17/07, Evan Klitzke <evan-lists eklitzke.org> wrote:
> ... The RHCE material looks a
bit more advanced,
> but I still know a good deal of it, and if I studied I
could get one
> before I graduate (next year). That being said, both
exams are fairly
> costly for a student: LPI-2 would be four $150 exams,
and the RHCE exam
> is $750. Additionally, I'd have to take the RHCE exam
again anyway
> (albeit at a lower price) in a few years anyway to keep
the
> certification.
One point of clarification here, the RHCE certification
doesn't go
away but it does stop being considered "current"
after two major
releases. This is pretty reasonable since two major releases
of RHEL
encompass substantial changes.
> My question is: how valuable do you think that these
kinds of
> certifications are? I feel like getting them might
prove to employers
> that I might not be as green as I appear, when it
becomes time to go job
> hunting. On the other hand, there doesn't seem to be a
lot of demand for
> these certifications, and my impression is that very
few people actually
> get them. Are these certifications important, or are
they just skipped
> over on resumes?
It seems fairly common in my part of the world for the RHCE
to help
some on a resume. I don't know anyone who cares about the
LPI or
pencil and paper certs. When it is time to interview 3
people for a
job and you have 20 to choose from anything that makes you
stand apart
helps in the weeding out process. With jobs related to free
software,
even being a sysadmin at a site that uses free software, it
is also
helpful to getting noticed if you have actively contributed
in some
way in your hobby time. Having a linkage between what you
enjoy doing
for fun and what you are trying to do for work is a good
thing too.
John
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