2021 – New Job, new Certs, same ambitions

I have not provided any updates lately, primarily due to work and study. However… there have been some significant changes that I am excited to share!

Let’s start with continuous learning. The last post about this included me obtaining my CompTIA Security+. Since then I have obtained the following certifications

  • Microsoft 365 Certified: Teams Administrator Associate
  • CompTIA: Secure Cloud Professional (CSCP)
  • CompTIA: Cloud+
  • CompTIA: Cloud Essentials+

I also completed four (4) university courses for good measure.

Lastly, and possibly more importantly? I started a new job at Microsoft! Which I’m incredibly grateful for.. and to be honest.. it still doesn’t feel real. This journey is just starting but I am looking forward to making a rapid impact. These past few weeks have been challenging and have introduced a change of pace – like all things new and different… we must adapt!

Totally looking forward to the future, this summer especially. COVID-19 is starting to flatten out a bit.. hoping to be vaccinated soon so that the thought of it can dissipate.

dreams come true..take life day by day.

Joe

Why Technical Jobs are a labor of love

When it comes to working in IT Operations or Development (software engineering), you have to learn and relearn CONSTANTLY. Recently in the news I saw how tech jobs rarely require a degree, and it’s for good reason. When you walk over and snatch that diploma out of your proctors hands, you’re already obsolete — or at least figuratively speaking.

The same goes for guys like myself whom are certified. While some of them may never expire, and others have a 3 year shelf life — the fact of the matter is; in the era of the Cloud… it’s obsolete within months. These facts are why I insist that pursuing a job in tech must be journey you love. Getting into tech can’t be driven entirely by pay (I do AGREE pay is certainly a motivating factor), but one must innately be drawn to the field through intrinsic means.

Most of the folks I work with or have previously worked with were big into PC gaming, electronics, building stuff, tinkering with things, etc. If this doesn’t sound like you, then I hate to tell you… you’re going to burn out faster than a match from your favorite pub.

It’s a labor of love. You’ve got to want to learn it not because you’re told or expected to, but because you’re curious and want to get in on it. Anybody can do something for a little while, but its that consistency, that grit that gets the job done. If you don’t love it, it’s not impossible… but it’ll be hard. The people who love it around you will get be getting certified and learning the bleeding edge stuff just because they feel like it, while those who don’t will find it a daunting task.

AZ-100 here I come.