First I'm sorry if this isn't appropriate for the hole Second I'm not Indian Third I'm not a codecel and I notice that's what rDrama seems to lean towards. I was thinking something like helpdesk or even physical repair shop before looking at cybersecurity or network infrastructure.
How do people feel about comptia certifications anyway? I've heard conflicting opinions including on this very site.
I don't have any IT work experience, just my wagie jobs. I've heard projects are a good substitute but what would be a good project for a non-codecel? Should I set up switches and routers or something? Also what kind of tests should I expect in the actual interview?
Also I've never messed with LinkedIn before. Do I have to go do that?
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The problem with certifications is that they don't move the needle where it matters:
if resumes are aggressively screened, it's not as good as a real degree, or even 1 year of experience
if the interviewer is fishing for competence, 2 questions will tell him more than the cert
You're basically paying for the illusion of the tested material being somehow universal to the industry but that's not really true anymore. They can signal that you're capable of learning but mostly they mark you as a rube if the cert wasn't required for your role.
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I didn't even realize the Comptia A+ exam was still a thing
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What interview questions are common for an entry level support position?
I'm trying to narrow down what to actually practice.
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Probably just stuff related to the job you'll be doing, which you may or may not know. Convince them that you'll spend an appropriate amount of time trying to find the answer yourself and then you'll politely bug your superiors
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