I used to work in SAP (certified ABAP) from 1998 to 2000. Left to get into a more niche field with no relationship to SAP.
Regret my move but eh life is what you make of it. Eventually went contracting in this niche in 2005 and luckily it's worked out OK for me now.
Thing is, SAP has it's own specialisms which blwo hot and cold depending on demand. So SD/MM used to be hot and so did HR modules etc many years ago, paying like £1k a day. ABAP on the other hand is much more sudbued and pays a relatively OK rate of £400/day on average (I'm not 100% up to date on this though).
So if you train up in a particular module then you run the risk of discovering that it's not the best one to be in.
Follow your stengths - if you're a Unix guy, get into SAP BASIS. If you're a coder, get into ABAP. If you're a functional analyst, choose the module of the area you know best.
Regret my move but eh life is what you make of it. Eventually went contracting in this niche in 2005 and luckily it's worked out OK for me now.
Thing is, SAP has it's own specialisms which blwo hot and cold depending on demand. So SD/MM used to be hot and so did HR modules etc many years ago, paying like £1k a day. ABAP on the other hand is much more sudbued and pays a relatively OK rate of £400/day on average (I'm not 100% up to date on this though).
So if you train up in a particular module then you run the risk of discovering that it's not the best one to be in.
Follow your stengths - if you're a Unix guy, get into SAP BASIS. If you're a coder, get into ABAP. If you're a functional analyst, choose the module of the area you know best.
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