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What do you expect the most superior Microsoft accredited suppliers to offer a client in this country currently? Undoubtedly, the finest Microsoft authorised training routes, supplying a range of courses to take you towards various areas of industry.

Try to consider all the options with an advisor who is on familiar terms with the IT industry, and will help you select the most fruitful career to go with your personal characteristics.

Be sure your training course is tailored to your needs and abilities. The best companies will ensure that your training track is designed for the job you want to get.

We’d hazard a guess that you’re a practical sort of person - a ‘hands-on’ type. Typically, the unfortunate chore of reading reference guides is something you’ll make yourself do if you have to, but it’s not ideal. Consider interactive, multimedia study if learning from books is not your thing.

Where we can utilise all of our senses into our learning, then we often see hugely increased memory retention as a result.

Modern training can now be done at home via self-contained CD or DVD materials. Instructor-led tutorials will mean you’ll learn your subject via their teaching and demonstrations. You can then test yourself by practicing and interacting with the software.

All companies should willingly take you through a few examples of the materials provided for study. Make sure you encounter videos of instructor-led classes and many interactive sections.

Avoiding training that is delivered purely online is generally a good idea. You want physical CD/DVD ROM course materials where possible, as you need to be able to use them whenever it’s convenient for you - you don’t want to be reliant on your broadband being ‘up’ 100 percent of the time.

Many people question why qualifications from colleges and universities are being replaced by more commercially accredited qualifications?

Corporate based study (in industry terminology) is far more specialised and product-specific. Industry has realised that specialisation is what’s needed to service the demands of a technologically complex world. Adobe, Microsoft, CISCO and CompTIA are the key players in this arena.

Many degrees, as a example, can often get caught up in too much background study - and a syllabus that’s too generalised. This prevents a student from getting enough core and in-depth understanding on a specific area.

In simple terms: Commercial IT certifications give employers exactly what they’re looking for - it says what you do in the title: i.e. I am a ‘Microsoft Certified Professional’ in ‘Managing and Maintaining Windows Server 2003′. So companies can identify exactly what they need and which qualifications are required to fulfil that.

A fatal Faux-Pas that we encounter all too often is to focus entirely on getting a qualification, and not focus on the end result they want to achieve. Schools are brimming over with students that chose a program because it looked interesting - rather than what would get them the job they want.

You could be training for only a year and end up performing the job-role for decades. Don’t make the error of choosing what sounds like a program of interest to you only to spend 20 years doing a job you don’t like!

Spend some time thinking about earning potential and the level of your ambition. Sometimes, this affects what precise exams you’ll need to attain and what you can expect to give industry in return.

We’d recommend you take advice from an experienced professional before embarking on a learning course, so you’re sure from the outset that the specific package will give the skills for the job being sought.

The somewhat scary thought of securing your first computer related job is often made easier by some training providers because they offer a Job Placement Assistance facility. The honest truth is that it isn’t so complicated as you might think to land your first job - as long as you’ve got the necessary skills and qualifications; the shortage of IT personnel in Britain looks after that.

CV and Interview advice and support may be available (alternatively, check out one of our sites for help). Ensure you bring your CV right up to date right away - don’t leave it till you pass the exams!

It’s not unusual to find that you will get your initial position whilst still on the course (even when you’ve just left first base). If your CV doesn’t show your latest training profile (and it hasn’t been posted on jobsites) then you’re not even going to be known about!

The top companies to help you land that job are generally specialist locally based employment services. Because they only get paid when they place you, they have more incentive to get on with it.

In a nutshell, if you put the same amount of effort into getting a position as into training, you won’t find it too challenging. Some students strangely spend hundreds of hours on their learning program and then call a halt once they’ve passed their exams and seem to expect employers to find them.

Author: Scott Edwards. Pop over to Database Training or Click HERE.

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