IT Certifications Declining in Value
Finally some good news, if you believe like I always have that IT certifications were nothing but a money-making scam from software developers and didn't prove a thing other than the test-taker was good at thinking inside their box and seeing through trick questions. I've never fallen for the certification scam, and I'd pit my programming knowledge/skills against an inexperienced MCSD any day of the week. No offense to any MCSD's reading, but I can't tell you how glad I am to see the industry finally wising up.
By Deb Perelman
2008-06-04
IT leaders, analysts and in-the-trenches professionals say certifications mean little in the candidate selection process.
Though not all were created equally, IT certifications once had an almost-guaranteed value.
In the years after the dot-com bust, many IT pros stocked up certifications namely in an effort to improve their job security. Their managers, in turn, used these accreditations to assure their value to the organization's penny-pinchers.
But when speaking to CIOs, IT managers and analysts about what counts and what doesn't on an IT professional's resume nowadays, one thing that stands out is an almost universal agreement that IT certifications don't matter the way they used to.
David Foote, whose management consultancy Foote Partners has been tracking the value of IT certifications for years, argues that a shift away from certifications has to do with a shift away from purely technical roles in the IT department.
"Certifications were created by vendors to sell products. Once people were trained, these companies ended up with all of these specialists out there that didn’t work for them but advocated for them," said Foote.
In research released May 17, Foote Partners found that the average pay for 164 IT certifications posted their seventh straight quarterly decline in the beginning of 2008. Meanwhile, the market values of IT skills continued to climb.
"These days, our research has been heading towards the conclusion that it's about execution; the hiring focus is less about pure technology and more about technology instinct—the ability to get stuff done and develop solutions that can be used down the road," said Foote.
Those who work in the IT recruiting space agree. Sean Ebner, vice president for the Western region of Technisource, an IT recruiting firm, also said that certifications are not as in vogue as they once were.
"A PMP is nice to have on a resume, but when companies are looking for someone to take on a project, their experience and history of executing similar projects is more important," said Ebner.
However, Ebner does feel that there are instances—usually in roles that are strongly focused on specific technologies—when certifications can help serve as a candidate selection tool.
"At a lower level, the certifications are more important because it's a way to filter. If they work in a technical environment, such as Microsoft, that A+ certification is a way to measure their skills," said Ebner, referring to the CompTIA A+ base-level technician certification.
Foote found some exceptions to the decline of certifications as well, but only in the security arena, due to its heavily technical nature.
"Security is a deeply technical domain and certification is an important qualification in areas where technical skills dominate," he explained.
Yet even with these exceptions, the in-the-trenches IT folks say they're no longer using certifications to making hiring decisions.
"Certifications count for zero," one IT manager at a large retail company told eWEEK, insisting that they only proved someone was good at taking a test. "They correlate little with what kind of asset they'd be."
_________________
Reasonable people adapt themselves to the world. Unreasonable people attempt to adapt the world to themselves. All progress, therefore, depends on unreasonable people.---George Bernard Shaw
8th Cmdmt: Thou Shalt Not Steal.
I knew that after getting hired by Convergys for the HP Pavilion project, half
of my CNA Computer Network Administration class were also hired there, my
certificate is as worthless as the paper its written on. All I got out of it was, a
sense of failure and disappointment, I wasted 3 years at a dead end job, talking
to brain dead end users
But what about those of us who want to be better at technology but who are better at learning in the classroom than in their parents' basement, fiddling around with computers, where, if you mess up, you either have to hope you'll get someone who speaks English and/or is competent over the tech support line, or if you really really mess the computer up (like I did two summer ago), end up having to shell out $4,000 for a new one.
If you're not one of those "since he was 2-6 years old good with computers" but are going into the field because you're exceptionally tallented at one aspect of them (programming in my case), and only wish to broaden your horizon of expertise, and more esoteric technical know how?
If you're not one of those "since he was 2-6 years old good with computers" but are going into the field because you're exceptionally tallented at one aspect of them (programming in my case), and only wish to broaden your horizon of expertise, and more esoteric technical know how?
Knowledge still counts. Just demonstrate you know what you are talking about. I have a BS in CS, and any CS degree will still get you a long way. It's just pass/fail tests that you can study a week for or download a brain-dump online for and which don't really demonstrate genuine programming ability just don't count so much any more.
_________________
Reasonable people adapt themselves to the world. Unreasonable people attempt to adapt the world to themselves. All progress, therefore, depends on unreasonable people.---George Bernard Shaw
8th Cmdmt: Thou Shalt Not Steal.
Last edited by LoveableNerd on 06 Jun 2008, 12:06 am, edited 1 time in total.
If you're not one of those "since he was 2-6 years old good with computers" but are going into the field because you're exceptionally tallented at one aspect of them (programming in my case), and only wish to broaden your horizon of expertise, and more esoteric technical know how?
Knowledge still counts. Just demonstrate you know what you are talking about. I have a BS in CS, and any CS degree will still get you along way. It's just pass/fail tests that you can study a week for or download a brain-dump online for and which don't really demonstrate genuine programming ability just don't count so much any more.
NOT having certifications has worked to my benefit. There are consulting firms that advertise that all their EMPLOYEES are certified. Therefore, what certification got you was being a salaried employee that worked overtime for no additional pay. I was brought on as an independent contractor (NOT AN EMPLOYEE) and paid for every hour I worked!
_________________
Yeah with all of these men lining up to get neutered
It's hip now to be feminized
I don't highlight my hair
I've still got a pair
Yeah honey, I'm still a guy
t0
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Joined: 23 Mar 2008
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I don't think "real" IT companies ever hired based on certs. They're just a starting point for the interviewer to start asking questions. Now if the company is using a non-technical person to interview technical people - then the certification becomes an easy way to BS someone who doesn't know any better.