Certification Bazaar: The Ugly Side

The certification bazaar has  taken off in the Indian IT industry. Courses range from PMI’s PMP, OGC’s PRINCE2 and ITIL, COBIT, TOGAF and BPM.

Purveyors of these courses charge you an arm and a leg; certification and their maintenance will in all probability cost you another arm and a leg.Do you wish to put down that kind of money with the possibility of little or no returns on your investment?

Horror stories of how folks are certified but have no opportunity to practise abound, but at least in some cases, employers are willing to foot the bill to retain the certified hordes. Yet others do not have the said luxury. Would you re-certify yourself if you had to pay from your own pocket?

Marketing emails  sniff out an inkling of a need or a requirement. The tactics could be termed innovative or (if you wish to be critical) , they  smack of desperation.

Courses and their faculty seem to be  disjoint and disparate from the industry and reality.

It’s a chicken and egg situation. Should you  certify and then gain experience on the same? Or gain experience first and then have yourself certified?

What do you think?

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The other bugbear in the Indian IT industry is not sexism, as you would like to believe, but ageism.

Lack of seasoned professionals in the industry and pre-dominance of young professionals is the cause of this malaise.

Churlish behaviour of the young ‘uns only reinforces the impression.

Just another ugly facet of the celebrated success story.

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Quote of the day:
Whatever you do will be insignificant, but it is very important that you do it. – Mahatma Gandhi

Six guidelines for making grounded money decisions

Here are six guidelines that will help you keep your limbic system and your money separate so that the lizard in you does not get to make your money decisions.

  1. Avoid making important money decisions when you are emotional. Heightened emotion –– good or bad — narrows your perspective, cuts you off from your sense of the big picture and makes it more difficult to logically see long-term consequences of your choices.
  2. Avoid making important money decisions under tension or fatigue. Increased tension produces emotional regression with increased tension and advanced conflict. The stress response reaction can move someone into a more emotional pattern characteristic of a much earlier age. The same holds true for fatigue. Take important decisions after tensions have calmed and you are rested.
  3. Be willing to sleep on it. There are few true emergencies in life. Investing isn’t one of them and neither is buying that plasma television. If it is a good decision today, it will be a good decision tomorrow after you’ve had the state change and perspective of sleeping on it.
  4. Have a well-informed and fully structured plan. Look at the big picture and your long-term objectives and create a strategy and game plan based on facts rather than on emotions or instinctive reactions.
  5. Stick to your plan especially in times of doing extremely well and feeling euphoric. Stick to the plan. Get your excitement and take your risks in areas other than finance.
  6. Worry about the right things. Decide what you can control (your plan, your actions, your decisions) and what you can’t (market conditions,external events) and put all your effort, energy
    and focus into those things you can affect. When things happen that are beyond your control and that you cannot determine, stick to the plan.

Source: BizSum’s Lite Summary of The Secret Language Of Money
How To Make Smarter Financial Decisions and Live A Richer Life

By By David Krueger, M.D. with John David Mann , McGraw Hill, 2009

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I’d rather be a climbing ape than a falling angel. -Terry Pratchett, novelist (b. 1948).