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So how's it work then? You just memorise the study guides, fork out £500 for the exams, and Bob's your uncle?
If you memorise the exam questions then you can be sure you pass but if you want to do it to learn I must admit it's not easy at all (and even memorising the questions takes quite a long time - I preferred spending more time learning rather then just studying to pass the exam). I am 3 out of 5 self-learning and I must admit that it was quite tough (perhaps as my background is on j2ee/unix) and a pleasant experience to learn (plus I particularly enjoy the microsoft solution framework, although the exam was a bit of a nuisance).
I've seen much of the rest of the world. It is brutal and cruel and dark, Rome is the light.
Milan, is there an equivalent certification for SAP skills? The streets are paved with gold in SAP land I'm told.
They are according to the story on the sites front page....
"The same can be said for rival SAP. Over the same 13-month period, hourly averages have leapt from £32.00 to £46.29. And the number of roles requesting SAP experience has trebled in the last three months alone, reaching 2,636. Particularly hot modules include SAP HR, offering £500 per day, with some 200 vacancies. And whoever gets the two ‘senior SAP programme manager’ roles will be able to enjoy a healthy £800 per day. "
"Being nice costs nothing and sometimes gets you extra bacon" - Pondlife.
A massive oversupply of .Net developers is threatening to destabilize the UK economy, according to the Gartner group, an IT consultancy.
In a report released today they claim "Every man and his dog has been jumping on the .Net bandwagon, due to low barriers to entry and noddy certfication courses."
The report continues, "Growth areas for 2006 include SAP, where there is already a chronic shortage of qualified developers. We also expect to see an upsurge in demand for people with Visual TapeChanger skills, particularly in the enterprise space".
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