With such a large selection of computer courses on offer these days, it’s best to take advice from a training company that will offer guidance on the right one for you. Professional organisations will talk thoroughly through the various career options that might suit you, before offering you a computer course that can educate you in the relevant field.
There are so many directions you can go in. Certain students simply want Microsoft user skills, many go for career changes into Web Design, Databases, Programming or Networking – and these are all possible. However, don’t pluck a course out of the air. We’d advise you to discuss your needs with an advisor who knows this commercial sector, and will guide you to where you want to go.
By reducing overhead structures, training companies now exist with modern courses that feature outstanding training and guidance for much less than is expected from the traditional establishments.
Consider the following facts in detail if you think that old marketing ploy of ‘guaranteeing’ exams sounds like a benefit to the student:
These days, we’re a little bit more aware of sales ploys – and usually we know that for sure it is something we’re paying for – they’re not just being charitable and doling out freebies!
It’s well known in the industry that when trainees fund each examination, one by one, the chances are they’re going to qualify each time – as they’ll think of the cost and therefore will put more effort into their preparation.
Does it really add up to pay a training college in advance for examination fees? Hold on to your money and pay for the exam when you take the exam, don’t pay mark-ups – and do it in a local testing centre – not at somewhere of their bidding.
Paying upfront for exam fees (plus interest – if you’re financing your study) is a false economy. Why fill a company’s coffers with extra money of yours simply to help their cash-flow! Many will hope you will never make it to exams – but they won’t refund the cash.
Re-takes of any failed exams through training companies who offer an ‘Exam Guarantee’ are always heavily controlled. They’ll insist that you take mock exams first until you’ve proven that you’re likely to pass.
With the average price of Pro-metric and VUE tests in the United Kingdom costing around 112 pounds, it’s common sense to fund them one by one. Why splash out often many hundreds of pounds extra at the beginning of your training? A commitment to studying and the use of authorised exam preparation tools are actually the key to your success.
Student support is absolutely essential – locate a good company offering 24×7 direct access to instructors, as anything else will annoy you and definitely put a damper on the speed you move through things.
some companies only provide email support (slow), and telephone support is usually to a call-centre who will chat nicely with you for 5 minutes to ask what the issue is and then simply send an email to an instructor – who will then call back sometime over the next 24hrs, when it’s convenient to them. This is not a lot of use if you’re sitting there confused over an issue and have a one hour time-slot in which to study.
The best training colleges provide an online access 24×7 package pulling in several support offices throughout multiple time-zones. You’re offered an interface which switches seamlessly to the best choice of centres no matter what time of day it is: Support when you need it.
Never make the mistake of compromise where support is concerned. The majority of would-be IT professionals that throw in the towel, just need the right support system.
Be watchful that any qualifications you’re working towards are commercially relevant and are current. Training companies own certificates are usually worthless.
If your certification doesn’t come from a company like Microsoft, Cisco, Adobe or CompTIA, then you may discover it won’t be commercially viable – as no-one will have heard of it.
Beginning with the understanding that it’s necessary to locate the employment that excites us first, before we’re able to ponder which development program fulfils our needs, how can we choose the right direction?
Consequently, without any background in the IT industry, how could you possibly know what some particular IT person actually does day-to-day? Let alone arrive at what educational path provides the best chances for ultimate success.
To work through this, a discussion is necessary, covering many different aspects:
* Your personality can play a major part – what gives you a ‘kick’, and what are the areas that really turn you off.
* Are you driven to get qualified because of a specific reason – for example, is it your goal to work based at home (self-employment possibly?)?
* How highly do you rate salary – is an increase your main motivator, or is enjoying your job a little higher on the scale of your priorities?
* Getting to grips with what the main career roles and sectors are – plus how they’re different to each other.
* You need to understand what differentiates all the training areas.
To bypass all the jargon and confusion, and uncover the best path to success, have an informal meeting with an industry-experienced advisor; someone that will cover the commercial realities and truth as well as all the qualifications.
(C) 2009 S. Edwards. Pop to Database Training Courses or www.NewCareerOptions.co.uk/qncarop.html.