IMPROVING CERTIFICATION CERTAINTY (PART 1) | Latest News

I went to the topic of technology certification by mentioning my certification path and my reasons for all these tests. This month, I want to get more specific information and talk about techniques to help you choose, prepare and pass a certification exam.

In my experience, people can be confident in their everyday work, they need to be familiar with current technical and future trends and be able to practice or even teach others. But you say that word test, test or quiz and for many people (but certainly not all), everything goes out of the window. Much of this has to do with the emotions we attach to these ugly small exercises in almost life. So much of the importance and pressure of the test runs that re-perceive the feeling becomes difficult.

But if you grew up as a carefree ghost who thought "C is a great sheet and ultimately a cookie" and who plans to get a title in the theater, that means I - patterns of test patterns that other people, who were more full of NoDoz, and trying to remember everything that they had done in the night could be lost.

My willingness to get out of the test box and watch the mechanics around me continued after graduation. What I've found is that if you know only a little about how the tests are designed and run (and in particular IT certifications), you can reduce many anxieties forward and focus on actually passing the test. So I want to share with you today: the tricks and techniques I've discovered along the way for submitting certificates.


Which Cert Is Right for You?

As I described last month, some certifications are required as part of your work (or as part of the work you want to have). In many cases, however, IT professionals are embarrassed and have the potential to carry out certification in multiple sub-disciplines (networking, system management, storage and security), vendor-specific certificates (Cisco, Juniper, and SolarWinds) to cover a wider range of themes +, Net +, etc.).

In this case, the first simple answer is to select a certification that is relevant to your field. This is where you will have the greatest chance of success because you will know concepts, trends and technologies.

The second and almost such easy answer is to choose the certification relevant to the job you want to do. It will undoubtedly be a larger stretch, but that's a reason, though? I have also found that when assessing career advancements in the IT field, certification studies in this new area are at a low risk of determining whether work will be satisfied before committing to full employment change.

The third answer is slightly deeper than the first two: find a certification that affects the area where your work or specialization is going. In this age of hybrid information technology, it completely covers topics and technologies focused on cloud. However, it could also easily lead you to virtualization, monitoring, or information security certifications on the site.

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