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CompTIA Network Plus Training Providers Revealed

by Jason Kendall

In this day and age, many workplaces would be severely hampered were it not for support workers mending PC’s and networks, while giving advice to users each and every day. Our country’s need for increasing numbers of commercially qualified individuals is growing, as we become ever more dependent on PC’s in the modern world.

We can see a plethora of work available in IT. Finding the particular one out of this complexity often proves challenging.

What is our likelihood of grasping the day-to-day realities of any IT job when we’ve never done it? Often we haven’t met someone who works in that sector anyway.

Achieving a well-informed answer only comes from a meticulous study across many different areas:

* Your personality can play a starring role – what gives you a ‘kick’, and what are the areas that you really dislike.

* What length of time can you allocate for retraining?

* Where do you stand on job satisfaction vs salary?

* Getting to grips with what the main career areas and sectors are – including what sets them apart.

* How much effort you’re prepared to spend on the training program.

When all is said and done, the most intelligent way of covering these is by means of an in-depth discussion with a professional who understands the market well enough to lead you to the correct decision.

Doing your bit in revolutionary new technology really is electrifying. Your actions are instrumental in impacting progress around the world.

Society largely thinks that the increase in technology we have experienced is easing off. Nothing could be further from the truth. There are huge changes to come, and the internet in particular is going to dominate how we conduct our lives.

The money in IT isn’t to be sniffed at either – the average salary in the UK for the usual IT worker is considerably better than the national average. Odds are that you’ll receive quite a bit more than you’d typically expect to bring in elsewhere.

With the IT marketplace increasing year on year, it’s predictable that the search for appropriately qualified IT professionals will remain buoyant for the significant future.

Quite often, students have issues with one aspect of their training very rarely considered: The breakdown of the course materials before being physically delivered to you.

A release of your materials piece by piece, according to your own speed is the usual method of releasing your program. This sounds logical, but you must understand the following:

Students often discover that the company’s standard order of study is not what they would prefer. Sometimes, it’s more expedient to use an alternative order of study. And what happens if they don’t finish at the pace they expect?

In an ideal situation, you’d get ALL the training materials right at the beginning – giving you them all to come back to at any time in the future – as and when you want. Variations can then be made to the order that you complete each objective if you find another route more intuitive.

Exam ‘guarantees’ are sometimes offered as part of a training package – they always involve paying for the exam fees up-front, when you pay for the rest of your course. Before you jump at this so-called guarantee, be aware of the facts:

You’ll pay for it ultimately. It certainly isn’t free – they’ve just worked it into the package price.

Qualifying on the first ‘go’ is what everyone wants to do. Taking your exams progressively one at a time and funding them one at a time sees you much better placed to get through first time – you revise thoroughly and are mindful of the investment you’ve made.

Isn’t it in your interests to hold on to your money and pay for the exam at the appropriate time, not to pay the fees marked up by the training college, and also to sit exams more locally – rather than possibly hours away from your area?

Is there a good reason to pay interest on a bigger loan than is necessary because you’ve paid early for examinations when there was no need to? Big margins are secured by training companies getting paid upfront for exams – and then cashing in when they’re not all taken.

Re-takes of previously unsuccessful exams through companies with an ‘Exam Guarantee’ are monitored with tight restrictions. They’ll insist that you take mock exams first till you’ve proven conclusively that you can pass.

The cost of exams was about 112 pounds last year via VUE or Pro-metric centres in the UK. So what’s the point of paying maybe a thousand pounds extra to get ‘an Exam Guarantee’, when common sense dictates that the responsible approach is a commitment to studying and the use of authorised exam preparation tools.

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