I figured it would be a reset - begin again kinda deal.
Good to know that my Windoze experience might be useful. Thanks for the feedback so far. Keep 'em coming.
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Reply to: Getting into SAP work
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Previously on "Getting into SAP work"
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I would suggest the 3,000 job losses and moving much of the grunt work to India might be why staff morale is flagging !? I have to say that the project I have been working on is liasing with SAP in India and they've done a decent job from what I can see. The attitude of European SAP employees was not always the best.
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That would be another option! Get an accountancy qualification and an MBA, get a seat on the board and then work your way down.
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Originally posted by mikeyboy View PostHow do I get a foothold in the SAP game? Can I do a bootcamp to learn the admin skills?
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Originally posted by northernladuk View PostI believe this is not true for SAP hence it being so difficult to get in to. It is far too big and complex to attempt this one and get away with it.
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Originally posted by DS23 View Postanother way is to piggy-back on business process experience. if you can prove that you know your onions about say, the implementation of best practice hr and payroll, you could potentially pick things up from manuals a few training courses.
but if you don't know your onions from your bunions about business process then its a long, hard slog. offer yourself to some of the consultancies and who knows where you might end up.
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another way is to piggy-back on business process experience. if you can prove that you know your onions about say, the implementation of best practice hr and payroll, you could potentially pick things up from manuals
a few training courses.
but if you don't know your onions from your bunions about business process then its a long, hard slog. offer yourself to some of the consultancies and who knows where you might end up.
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On sdn.sap.com, you'll find many Indians asking the same question.
You can go through SAP Training and get certified. That might swing it for a permie to take on a junior. But it's a long shot.
I got into SAP in the late 90s, when there was a huge demand for SAP consultants. I had to go permie for a while, and was trained up by the employer - and enduser rather than a consultancy. I left after 15 months to go contracting again. A few years ago, I switched from ABAP on ECC to BI/BW. And I could only do that because one of my clients was very cooperative, had a project that needed doing, were willing to trust me to do the job, and were willing to support me. That's very unusual.
I encounter very few SAP contractors younger than ~35.
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Originally posted by zemoxyl View PostWhilst there is some truth in the above, you've got to think of reasons why they'd take you in preference to any of the many thousands of Indians they can pick for a pittance already trained up.
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Originally posted by zemoxyl View PostWhilst there is some truth in the above, you've got to think of reasons why they'd take you in preference to any of the many thousands of Indians they can pick for a pittance and train up.
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Originally posted by thunderlizard View PostThe absolute quickest way would be to join one of the big IT consultancies in a junior position, and say you've got a preference for SAP. They'll give you a book to read, then put you straight out to work as a senior SAP guru.
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Originally posted by thunderlizard View PostThe absolute quickest way would be to join one of the big IT consultancies in a junior position, and say you've got a preference for SAP. They'll give you a book to read, then put you straight out to work as a senior SAP guru.
Put on site as a 'Data Manager' expert to build data marts having spent 10 mins looking at the software.
I left that consultancy shortly after!Last edited by Pogle; 7 February 2010, 12:35.
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The absolute quickest way would be to join one of the big IT consultancies in a junior position, and say you've got a preference for SAP. They'll give you a book to read, then put you straight out to work as a senior SAP guru.
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The quick and dirty answer is you don't (at the same level you are at now, I am discounting the option to start back at user level and work up). It's like SC clearance. You gotta get lucky to get the experience to springboard you in to a nice closed shop.
I would say the best option is to try go permie and get trained or moved sideways into it.
Most contract postions want experienced guys because they don't have your own so chances of blagging it in and learning on the job are slim to nil.
Am sure somene will say read a book and blag it on CV but there you go.
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