"Peter Galbavy" <peter.galbavy@knowtion.net> wrote:
A willingness, nay - a NEED, to learn and be open to new concepts is what forward moving technology sectors (like ours I hope) need.
definately - however, i know of some very smart people, with a huge drive to learn, were relegated to clueless tasks because they didn't have many many years of experience. there is a distrubing trend amongst managers/etc where they think that if you haven't already done the job for several years, you can't learn to do it, or don't have the skill to do it. i am not saying that this is universal (as demonstrated by several posts here to that effect), but i think that these are exceptions
Acronyms mean sh*t. When involved in any hiring process, I actively avoid CCIE/MSCE/etc. laden resumes. Mentioning once, fine. Using them like religious phrases is an indictation of, well, stupidity.
certifications are often necessary to open the door - granted if you were architecting internetworks when many of today's certified 'engineers' were still in grade school, then no, certifications are probably not needed. experience is a catch-22, you need experience to get a job, but you need a job to get experience. i am not saying that certifications are a panacea, but lacking the ability to say that i built $major_isp, my certs have helped me (a little) in getting past the recruiter/hr to where my technical skills can be demonstrated
i'm recruiter-proof. i'm not sure i'd want anyone who wasn't.
Aye. I have *never* used my CV/Resume in getting a job. I still have one, but it's very out of date.
never is a long time perhaps it is just the fact that i am 'new' to the field, but my resume has gotten me all but one job, and my resume indirectly got me that one. my slightly bitter $0.02 /joshua
Peter
"Walk with me through the Universe, And along the way see how all of us are Connected. Feast the eyes of your Soul, On the Love that abounds. In all places at once, seemingly endless, Like your own existence." - Stephen Hawking -