Originally posted by Cowboy Bob
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do you pay for training?
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Both knowledge and experience are important. Just as you said some people memorise a bunch of crap then other people do a crap job and pass it as an outstanding experience (sometimes even adding things that they never touched, and oh... magically everybody assumes some management and team leading responsibility too). By penalising the ones who worked hard for the knowledge (and normally the ones with the right attitude to work hard when they do experience) I am not sure what you can really achieve.I've seen much of the rest of the world. It is brutal and cruel and dark, Rome is the light. -
Would you go to a dentist without qualifications Franko?I remember the good old days of this site when people used to moan about serious contractor related issues like house prices and immigration. How times have changed!?Comment
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Experience IS knowledge...Originally posted by FranckoBoth knowledge and experience are important.Comment
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No I wouldn't but the dentist sector is very different. There is a common set of knowledge that people should know and use it everyday. What is that with IT? What's important to know and what's not? Does it really matter if your unix administrator knows the Markov chain or the red-binary tree when all it really matters is that your unix servers are working all the time? Besides, the technology is continually changing so that what you knew in the past is almost useless and the continous training is the most important thing.Originally posted by NumptycornerWould you go to a dentist without qualifications Franko?I've seen much of the rest of the world. It is brutal and cruel and dark, Rome is the light.Comment
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Yes and no. When I was a developer I have seen many of them keep using the wrong structures simply because they didn't have the theorical knowledge to approach the most efficient ones. If you don't have enough knowledge your experience will be limited and you might be like a pianist who plays with a single hand. Of course, you can improve your knowledge everyday while you are doing your day-to-day job but that is not necessarily the case for everybody. We all agree that knowledge doesn't make up for lack of experience but what I find disagreable is your opposition to reward theoretical knowledge. You are wrongly concentrating your focus on people that do not study properly and effectively, but that is probably the same percentage as people who do not work properly and effectively.Originally posted by Cowboy BobExperience IS knowledge...I've seen much of the rest of the world. It is brutal and cruel and dark, Rome is the light.Comment
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With Dentists in the UK, who can tell the difference ?Originally posted by NumptycornerWould you go to a dentist without qualifications Franko?Comment
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So university degrees and formal education are useless, right?Originally posted by Cowboy BobExperience IS knowledge...Carpe Pactum
(does fuzzy logic tickle?)Comment
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Only if you don't have them, apparentlyOriginally posted by To BI or not to BI?So university degrees and formal education are useless, right?
I remember the good old days of this site when people used to moan about serious contractor related issues like house prices and immigration. How times have changed!?Comment
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Oh yes my friend, I couldn't agree more...or from a trainer who, if they were any good at the subject they're supposed to be teaching, would be out in the marketplace using their skills.
Being an accredited trainer and a consultant means that you can take the odd 3 days off here and there, train the occasional Foundation course and be back at your desk with no off comments from your prime contract.
It keeps my accountant happy and I know I've got work if things turn quiet between 'proper' contracts."I can put any old tat in my sig, put quotes around it and attribute to someone of whom I've heard, to make it sound true."
- Voltaire/Benjamin Franklin/Anne Frank...Comment
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I know where you're coming from. However ......Originally posted by Cowboy BobFor me it would depend on where the reference to the certification is on the CV. If it's in a prominent "look at what I got" position, then the CV will go straight in the bin. If it's in a low key "on top of my experience I also happen to hold this" position, then I'd give the CV a chance.
I have a string of academic and professional qualifications. I'm not going to hide these at the back of the cv where they are likely to be ignored but upfront. Management types like that stuff and thats how they themselves progressed.
If a techie is sifting cvs then your view holds some water.
The primary reason I have my 'best' quals upfront, immediately after a couple of lines profile and listing core 5 competencies is for the agent to read. The first hurdle / block. How many times have you wished to have one cv for the pimp and another (more or less the same content but diff. presentation) for the client.
The recruiter is ignorant and doesn't care about the nitty-gritty. Many of them are are impressed by paperwork. It can be really frustrating to be rejected by an agent because you don't have MCP in Exchange but only 6 years hands on!! Obviously the MCP is the right, safe choice to put fwd to a client.
2 hurdles: agent, client interview *in that order*. You need to do whatever it takes to get to stage 2 even if stg on the cv may not be exactly how you would like to portray yourseld to potential "co-workers."Comment
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