
February 8, 2010
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Nice One! As you’re reading this article you’re probably toying with the idea of getting re-qualified for a new job – so already you’ve made a start. Less of us than you’d think are happy and fulfilled in our work, but most complain but just stay there. So, why not be one of the few who actually do something about it.
We’d strongly advise that in advance of taking any study program, you have a conversation with someone who is familiar with the working environment and can give you advice. Such a person will go through personality profiling with you and assist in finding the right role for you:
* Would you like to work with others? If so, do you like working with the same people or do you want to meet lots of new people? Or would you rather work alone with a task?
* Are you considering which area you could be employed in? (Post credit crunch, it’s essential to be selective.)
* Is this the last time you imagine you’ll re-train, and if so, will your chosen career path service that need?
* Is it important for your retraining to be in a market sector where you’re comfortable your chances of gainful employment are high until your pension kicks in?
Don’t overlook the IT industry, it will be well worth your time – you’ll find it’s one of the only growth areas in this country and overseas. Another benefit is that remuneration packages are much better than most.
A typical blunder that students everywhere can make is to focus entirely on getting a qualification, rather than starting with where they want to get to. Colleges are brimming over with direction-less students that chose an ‘interesting’ course – instead of what would yield the career they desired.
Don’t be one of those unfortunate people that choose a course which looks like it could be fun – and end up with a certification for a job they hate.
Stay tuned-in to where you want to go, and formulate your training based on that – not the other way round. Stay focused on the end-goal – making sure you’re training for a career you’ll enjoy for years to come.
We recommend that students seek advice from a skilled professional before you begin some particular training path, so you can be sure that the content of a learning package provides the appropriate skill-set.
Your training program should always include the current Microsoft (or relevant organisation’s) authorised simulation materials and exam preparation packages.
Avoid relying on unauthorised exam papers and questions. Their phraseology can be completely unlike authorised versions – and often this creates real issues when the proper exam time arrives.
Ensure that you ask for testing modules that will allow you to verify your comprehension at any point. Practice or ‘mock’ exams log the information in your brain – so the actual exam is much easier.
When was the last time you considered how safe your job is? Normally, this isn’t an issue until something goes wrong. But really, the reality is that our job security has gone the way of the dodo, for nearly everyone now.
Security only exists now through a quickly escalating marketplace, driven forward by a shortfall of trained staff. It’s this alone that creates the correct setting for a secure marketplace – a far better situation.
Offering the Information Technology (IT) business as an example, a recent e-Skills analysis demonstrated major skills shortages in the country around the 26 percent mark. Put directly, we only have the national capacity to fill just 3 out of every four jobs in the computing industry.
This single idea on its own is the backbone of why Great Britain desperately needs considerably more new trainees to join the Information Technology market.
Because the IT sector is developing at such a quick pace, there really isn’t any other sector worth considering for a new future.
Ask almost any skilled consultant and they can normally tell you many terrible tales of students who’ve been conned by dodgy salespeople. Stick to an industry professional who quizzes you to discover the most appropriate thing for you – not for their paycheque! It’s very important to locate a starting-point that will suit you.
If you’ve got a strong background, or maybe some live experience (possibly even some previous certification?) then it’s more than likely the level you’ll need to start at will be quite dissimilar from someone with no background whatsoever.
It’s usual to start with some basic user skills first. It can brush up on your current abilities and make your learning curve a bit more manageable.
(C) S. Edwards 2009. Pop to CLICK HERE or Learn Web Design.

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