• Visitors can check out the Forum FAQ by clicking this link. You have to register before you can post: click the REGISTER link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. View our Forum Privacy Policy.
  • Want to receive the latest contracting news and advice straight to your inbox? Sign up to the ContractorUK newsletter here. Every sign up will also be entered into a draw to WIN £100 Amazon vouchers!

MS Dynamics AX - Next step for me?

Collapse
X
  •  
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #11
    Originally posted by NorthWestPerm2Contr View Post
    I would probably say the same to others if I was on £700/day.....
    £700 a day is after you've done 1-3 complete implementations and have years of experience in the appropriate section (say enterprise finance) and tool AX finance say.

    And without that experience you won't get your foot in the door. Its the same in the oracle world. Explicit knowledge with that tool in that sector is required.

    As an aside I worked in a consultancy that has a sideline specialized in Oracle ERP (Manufacturing) and Life Sciences. When one client finished they tried to get into a different sector within Manufacturing (where they were already a main supplier) and didn't get a look in. For that sort of money you need to be the correct fit as the company will wait for the right person / company as slight expertise is likely to do more harm than good.
    merely at clientco for the entertainment

    Comment


      #12
      Originally posted by SimonMac View Post
      I am having fun "learning" MS Dynamics CRM, there also seems to be a shortage of experience around the North at the moment going by the quality of the code monkeys we have here
      My CRM experience is mainly with Salesforce (as a trainer), but I've been looking to break in Dynamics CRM to broaden my range.

      Of course, the job adverts all insist on prior experience, and agents knock me back for not having it, despite the fact that the theory behind training users on Saleforce and Dynamics is fairly standard, and learning the button-pressing bit is straightforward. If anything, training on Dynamics would be easier as it's more standardised, whereas Salesforce is always fairly heavily customised by clients. I think I need to rejig my pitch for these types of jobs to try to get around the experience objection.

      Comment


        #13
        Originally posted by Ticktock View Post
        My CRM experience is mainly with Salesforce (as a trainer), but I've been looking to break in Dynamics CRM to broaden my range.

        Of course, the job adverts all insist on prior experience, and agents knock me back for not having it, despite the fact that the theory behind training users on Saleforce and Dynamics is fairly standard, and learning the button-pressing bit is straightforward. If anything, training on Dynamics would be easier as it's more standardised, whereas Salesforce is always fairly heavily customised by clients. I think I need to rejig my pitch for these types of jobs to try to get around the experience objection.
        And it is precisely that kind of "it's all the same" misconception that means you will never break into Dynamics.

        To answer NWP2C's question: Dynamics CRM is an easier skill to break into than AX from your current skillset - the coding is C#, JS, HTML5 and CSS, whereas AX is a fundamentally different product with a different architecture and its own language (X++). Most importantly AX is a product in which the most valuable skill you can bring is functional/domain experience, and you can't learn that from a textbook.

        (And to address another misconception, there is plenty of coding on decent-sized Dynamics CRM projects, the customisation-only gigs are for the amateurs)

        Comment


          #14
          Originally posted by cybersquatter View Post
          And it is precisely that kind of "it's all the same" misconception that means you will never break into Dynamics.
          Erm, no. That's bollocks.
          I didn't say "it's all the same", I said the theory is the same, and the theory of what a CRM system does is the same, no matter who the vendor is - each may have different capabilities and benefits, but the core is the same, with perhaps a slightly different focus.

          How each company uses the software, and what they are trying to get out of it changes, and that drives custom deployments.
          You seem to think that customising a CRM doesn't involve coding, which seems like an amateur comment, since customisation generally involves the development of custom pages, overlays, plug-ins, integrations, etc, not just renaming an object or a field.

          Training on a CRM system is more to do with how a user and a company benefit from it's use, understanding that and being able to relat that to users, rather than simply the button-pressing. If software is well designed then it's fairly intuitive. It's the business processes that complicate things.
          I've used Dynamics CRM, I've tested it, and I can demonstrate that I have an understanding of it. What I don't have is experience of training on it, and that's the stumbling block.

          Comment


            #15
            Why not become a deep SQL Server / Analysis Services / Data Mining guru with DBA certifications on top?

            You might not earn £700/day but you will pretty much work every day you want and bench time will be few and far between.

            Problem with these niche MS products is they tend to just go away one day when MS is bored with it.

            Relational databases and data mining isn't going away any time soon and is a growing and booming area.

            Just my 2p worth.

            Comment


              #16
              Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post
              Why not become a deep SQL Server / Analysis Services / Data Mining guru with DBA certifications on top?

              You might not earn £700/day but you will pretty much work every day you want and bench time will be few and far between.

              Problem with these niche MS products is they tend to just go away one day when MS is bored with it.

              Relational databases and data mining isn't going away any time soon and is a growing and booming area.

              Just my 2p worth.
              Cheers for the advice. I have considered going down that line but most of that work is down in London which is the last place I want to be working. I did see a role in York asking for that kind of stuff paying over £500/day so the work does exist.....

              Comment

              Working...
              X