Hey so I want to work in IT. \nI have a Bachelors in Communications, i’ve worked in TV a bit and now i’m working in a restaurant.<\/p>\n
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Applying to entry level positions at mid and large companies hasn’t been working even though I have listed i’ve set up a MS Server 2016, Red Hat server, used to develop for a Wordpress site in PHP, and have taught myself some networking basics and active directory.<\/p>\n
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I’m considering going back to school to get a Masters in Management Information Systems or taking a course or two at community college to help me study for the CCNA certification. I’ve been told by numerous people other certs are not respected.<\/p>\n
Opinions? Is there a better way to break in? \nThanks for reading - Ryan<\/p>","upvoteCount":12,"answerCount":14,"datePublished":"2017-10-05T21:36:55.000Z","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"ryanpihota","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/ryanpihota"},"acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"
[WARNING: GIGANTIC FRIGGIN’ BOOK APPROACHING]<\/p>\n
TL;DR:<\/strong><\/p>\n
Don’t go for a degree in the hopes that it’ll boost your chance of getting hired. It won’t, because those reviewing your resume will see right through it. Redirect your focus to smaller organizations because your lack of experience is what’s holding you back, not your lack of credentials. Smaller orgs are a little more flexible and lenient about education/certification requirements than larger ones, because there’s a wider field of competition among job seekers for those roles. Get your experience with smaller businesses to pad your resume, then<\/em> go for bigger orgs.<\/p>\n\n
I have my master’s in MIS, and given what you’ve written, I agree that it’s the worst option for you.<\/p>\n
I say this for three reasons:<\/p>\n
\n
A graduate degree has two legitimate purposes: either your career field requires it in order to advance because you’re already working in your career choice and it’s the next logical step (business management, teaching/other education or ed. administration) or your career field requires it in order to even begin<\/em> working in it (law, medicine, tenure-track university instructor)<\/li>\n
A master’s degree in a field in which you don’t already have years of experience is a waste of time and tuition dollars. A graduate degree in cases where it’s not a requirement for your career field should enhance<\/em> your career, not get you into it (again, in cases where it’s not law or medicine or similar where there’s a prescribed path of education before you’re even allowed to work professionally).<\/li>\n
MIS is a business degree, not a technology degree. In order for it to mean something in a career, you need to have business experience, not just technological.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
IT is not a field that requires a graduate degree to get started. In fact, it doesn’t require any degree at all.<\/p>\n
Conversely to popular misconception, not only is a master’s degree without experience a waste of time and money, it has the opposite effect of working against<\/em> you. You don’t have practical experience, short of having set up sandbox environments at a very small scale. An MS you add to it will simply be ignored, because your resume will clearly show your lack of professional experience.<\/p>\n
This means that you don’t get to actualize the value<\/em> that can potentially come from a graduate degree if you’d have played your cards right. This is where we say it’s ill-advised to pursue a graduate degree if you don’t already have experience in the field: the semesters you spend in class and the money you spend in tuition won’t pay themselves back in greater job prospects. It’s just years of class time and thousands of dollars spent for no payoff.<\/p>\n
Even for entry level positions at mid/large companies, they want practical experience. You probably noticed that in the job descriptions. “Must have xx years of experience in [technology1], [technology2], and [technology3]. Must be familiar with [whatever1], [whatever2]. Bachelor’s degree in CIS, MIS, or similar required.” They have bigger HR departments who’ll screen out a BA in Comm and restaurant experience before your app ever gets to the IT department.<\/p>\n
If you don’t know someone who knows someone who can be your foot in the door, a smaller shop will likely be your more accessible entry in, to get that practical experience you’re lacking. It may not be glamorous and it’ll clearly take a lot more time to advance in the field, but you honestly need the resume-building experience more than you need an empty degree or certification.<\/p>\n
After all, what good is a CCNA if you’ve never actually had to use the knowledge to put out a figurative fire in an IDF?<\/p>\n
When people are telling you other certs are not respected, it tells me that they’re speaking from their own personal biases. Which<\/strong> other certs? And respected/disrespected by whom? IT is a very wide field and encompasses a lot.<\/p>\n
I’d be willing to bet that I could pick out the flaws in their reasoning fairly quickly because railroading you toward one cert type is a disservice to you and your career goals. You may enjoy network fundamentals now<\/em>, but what about in 3-5 years when you have more experience under your belt? Maybe it’s something you master in a year and find it dreary. You can punch down a jack with your eyes closed (which would be incredibly impressive if you can differentiate orange-white from orange with your eyes closed…) and Cisco CLI, you can do half-asleep. You ache for the opportunity to code something. Powershell something. Python something. Or maybe hardening the entry points to a farm of Linux Web servers.<\/p>\n
Or maybe you discover a passion for buliding Web applications with C#.<\/p>\n
A CCNA doesn’t really do much for you in those areas. But an MCSD would. My long-winded point here is to not artificially narrow down your opportunities before you’ve even had a chance to explore them.<\/p>\n
When I entered the field of IT professionally in 1997, I never imagined for a second that I would be doing what I’m doing in 2017. I’m surrounded by databases – I’ve got SQL Server on one side, MySQL on another, and frickin’ PostgreSQL on yet another side. On top of that, I’ve got my hands in Jasper Studio Pro and IBM Cognos for report writing. And this is after I spent a year as SCCM administrator, crafting and deploying Windows task sequences, building out GPOs to complement them, and forced to learn bits of Powershell to do stuff I shouldn’t do by hand.<\/p>\n
In 1997, the extent of my IT career was building custom PCs, swapping out bad RAM, and tweaking Windows 98 settings for optimum performance. In 2003, I got certified to repair Macs (my job at the time paid for it). Problems is that my organization got rid of most Macs by 2012 (and even before then, I wasn’t really doing anything because every Mac had 3-year AppleCare, so we just returned everything under warranty). So while I had almost 10 years of use out of my ACMT, it’s worthless now.<\/p>\n
Given my point in my career, most common certs are useless to me. I don’t touch anything related to Cisco or networking, so CCxx is meaningless for me. Maybe MCSA/MCSE, but the only logical option is in SQL Server (which I’m still actually in the middle of). But that’s more for personal enrichment’s sake because of<\/em> my career path and how it works; technical certs are secondary to degrees and experience in my industry.<\/p>\n
My MIS degree (both undergrad and grad) will serve me better in my career choice because of my experience, not in place of.<\/p>","upvoteCount":5,"datePublished":"2017-10-06T00:15:02.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/breaking-into-it-mis-masters-or-ccna/610439/7","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"weirdfish","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/weirdfish"}},"suggestedAnswer":[{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Hey so I want to work in IT. \nI have a Bachelors in Communications, i’ve worked in TV a bit and now i’m working in a restaurant.<\/p>\n
Applying to entry level positions at mid and large companies hasn’t been working even though I have listed i’ve set up a MS Server 2016, Red Hat server, used to develop for a Wordpress site in PHP, and have taught myself some networking basics and active directory.<\/p>\n
I’m considering going back to school to get a Masters in Management Information Systems or taking a course or two at community college to help me study for the CCNA certification. I’ve been told by numerous people other certs are not respected.<\/p>\n
Opinions? Is there a better way to break in? \nThanks for reading - Ryan<\/p>","upvoteCount":12,"datePublished":"2017-10-05T21:36:55.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/breaking-into-it-mis-masters-or-ccna/610439/1","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"ryanpihota","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/ryanpihota"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Experience - Volunteer, if necessary. Anything.<\/p>\n
Certifications - Getting a CCNA will help you in most fields of IT. It couldn’t hurt and it’ll help get noticed on the resumes.<\/p>\n
Degrees - Worst choice of the three.<\/p>\n
Go forth, get experience and get certified and join the workforce!<\/p>","upvoteCount":4,"datePublished":"2017-10-05T21:47:20.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/breaking-into-it-mis-masters-or-ccna/610439/2","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Bud-G","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/Bud-G"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
I don’t think you can compare a CCNA and a MIS , at all.<\/p>\n
The big question is as usual, what’s your endgoal? Where do you see yourself in 5-10 years?<\/p>\n
A master degree, usually only helps if you want to go into management, and for that, an MBA would be a better choice.<\/p>\n
CCNA would be better for a technical role.<\/p>","upvoteCount":1,"datePublished":"2017-10-05T21:55:50.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/breaking-into-it-mis-masters-or-ccna/610439/3","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"Neally","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/Neally"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
CCNA is great if you want to work on Cisco gear … not so great if you don’t.<\/p>","upvoteCount":0,"datePublished":"2017-10-05T21:56:39.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/breaking-into-it-mis-masters-or-ccna/610439/4","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"johnmctaggart5616","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/johnmctaggart5616"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
If you can do it go for the Masters in Management Information Systems and while in college it will help you be more marketable to the entry level gigs in the Interview say<\/p>\n
I am a grad student and in MIS here is my experience and what I want to do with the grad degree most companies will see you as affordable and one to mold to there standards do what ever you can finish the grad degree it will definitely help you…depending on where you live get a help desk job or a tech job at small pc company…or best buy tech anything to be around it …getting the MIS degree will make you privy to networking /server labs already built and ready to use to help you study for the certifications<\/p>","upvoteCount":0,"datePublished":"2017-10-05T22:37:48.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/breaking-into-it-mis-masters-or-ccna/610439/5","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"MI50","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/MI50"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"
Masters in IT is a complete waste of money. Certs are too due to all the programs pumping out paper tigers left and right. Try for a help desk position at a small to medium company and work your way into a junior sue admin role somewhere else after you get experience. It won’t take much.<\/p>","upvoteCount":1,"datePublished":"2017-10-05T23:57:38.000Z","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/t/breaking-into-it-mis-masters-or-ccna/610439/6","author":{"@type":"Person","name":"youngitpro","url":"https://community.spiceworks.com/u/youngitpro"}},{"@type":"Answer","text":"