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    If not A+, then where should someone start?

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    • scottalanmillerS
      scottalanmiller @Dashrender
      last edited by

      @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

      @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

      If the A+ (or better) is a requirement, then the Net+ is above that and only the most worthless and corrupt HR department would ever attempt to screw their employer and not take it.

      This assumes the HR department knows that Network+ is higher than A+. Not an assumption I would make.

      No, it assumes HR is incompetent and not even remotely attempting to do its job. And that any job you'd want to waste time talking to would operate that way.

      One is a huge assumption people should not make, HR is rarely so incompetent or outright evil to sabotage their own firms intentionally. The IT hatred for HR does a lot to undermine logic in IT career planning. It's absurd.

      The second is a big planning mistake IT should not make. No one honestly trying to have a career should be focused on trying to get interviews and waste their time with the bottom of the barrel jobs. There will always be total career failures out there to fill those jobs, don't fight for them.

      ObsolesceO IRJI 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • ObsolesceO
        Obsolesce @scottalanmiller
        last edited by

        @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

        @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

        @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

        If the A+ (or better) is a requirement, then the Net+ is above that and only the most worthless and corrupt HR department would ever attempt to screw their employer and not take it.

        This assumes the HR department knows that Network+ is higher than A+. Not an assumption I would make.

        No, it assumes HR is incompetent and not even remotely attempting to do its job. And that any job you'd want to waste time talking to would operate that way.

        One is a huge assumption people should not make, HR is rarely so incompetent or outright evil to sabotage their own firms intentionally. The IT hatred for HR does a lot to undermine logic in IT career planning. It's absurd.

        The second is a big planning mistake IT should not make. No one honestly trying to have a career should be focused on trying to get interviews and waste their time with the bottom of the barrel jobs. There will always be total career failures out there to fill those jobs, don't fight for them.

        I don't think HR is bad at selecting good resumes to pass on to the hiring managers. I feel that's a general misconception and is as Scott says, only places you don't want to work anyways.

        IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • IRJI
          IRJ @Obsolesce
          last edited by

          @Obsolesce said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

          @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

          @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

          @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

          If the A+ (or better) is a requirement, then the Net+ is above that and only the most worthless and corrupt HR department would ever attempt to screw their employer and not take it.

          This assumes the HR department knows that Network+ is higher than A+. Not an assumption I would make.

          No, it assumes HR is incompetent and not even remotely attempting to do its job. And that any job you'd want to waste time talking to would operate that way.

          One is a huge assumption people should not make, HR is rarely so incompetent or outright evil to sabotage their own firms intentionally. The IT hatred for HR does a lot to undermine logic in IT career planning. It's absurd.

          The second is a big planning mistake IT should not make. No one honestly trying to have a career should be focused on trying to get interviews and waste their time with the bottom of the barrel jobs. There will always be total career failures out there to fill those jobs, don't fight for them.

          I don't think HR is bad at selecting good resumes to pass on to the hiring managers. I feel that's a general misconception and is as Scott says, only places you don't want to work anyways.

          Most places use recruiters for this now, they can be internal or external recruiters.

          DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • IRJI
            IRJ @scottalanmiller
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

            @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

            @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

            If the A+ (or better) is a requirement, then the Net+ is above that and only the most worthless and corrupt HR department would ever attempt to screw their employer and not take it.

            This assumes the HR department knows that Network+ is higher than A+. Not an assumption I would make.

            No, it assumes HR is incompetent and not even remotely attempting to do its job. And that any job you'd want to waste time talking to would operate that way.

            Is that really an HR responsibility? I guess maybe internal recruiters are considered HR, but they usually dont fall under that department from what I have seen.

            scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @IRJ
              last edited by

              @IRJ said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

              @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

              @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

              @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

              If the A+ (or better) is a requirement, then the Net+ is above that and only the most worthless and corrupt HR department would ever attempt to screw their employer and not take it.

              This assumes the HR department knows that Network+ is higher than A+. Not an assumption I would make.

              No, it assumes HR is incompetent and not even remotely attempting to do its job. And that any job you'd want to waste time talking to would operate that way.

              Is that really an HR responsibility? I guess maybe internal recruiters are considered HR, but they usually dont fall under that department from what I have seen.

              Not sure I've seen enough to say, but I feel that recruiting is either an HR (company wide) function or a departmental function.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • DashrenderD
                Dashrender @IRJ
                last edited by

                @IRJ said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                @Obsolesce said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                If the A+ (or better) is a requirement, then the Net+ is above that and only the most worthless and corrupt HR department would ever attempt to screw their employer and not take it.

                This assumes the HR department knows that Network+ is higher than A+. Not an assumption I would make.

                No, it assumes HR is incompetent and not even remotely attempting to do its job. And that any job you'd want to waste time talking to would operate that way.

                One is a huge assumption people should not make, HR is rarely so incompetent or outright evil to sabotage their own firms intentionally. The IT hatred for HR does a lot to undermine logic in IT career planning. It's absurd.

                The second is a big planning mistake IT should not make. No one honestly trying to have a career should be focused on trying to get interviews and waste their time with the bottom of the barrel jobs. There will always be total career failures out there to fill those jobs, don't fight for them.

                I don't think HR is bad at selecting good resumes to pass on to the hiring managers. I feel that's a general misconception and is as Scott says, only places you don't want to work anyways.

                Most places use recruiters for this now, they can be internal or external recruiters.

                It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                  the places that Scott and elk

                  Who?

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                    last edited by

                    @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                    It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                    No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                    DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                      @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                      It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                      No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                      I haven't been in the job market going through HR in - hmm... ever I guess. First tech job was a bench job, but was pulled off a telemarketing call floor to work it part time as one of the few on the floor who "knew anything about computers" - so no HR for that move, that job became full time jack of all trades on anything PC/phone related (including pulling cables). Inter-company department change - no HR, moved to another company where a friend worked - no HR, company merged with second company - no HR - Opened business - of course no HR, closed business went to work for a client - no HR...

                      Nope, never really dealt with HR myself.

                      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                        @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                        @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                        It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                        No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                        I haven't been in the job market going through HR in - hmm... ever I guess. First tech job was a bench job, but was pulled off a telemarketing call floor to work it part time as one of the few on the floor who "knew anything about computers" - so no HR for that move, that job became full time jack of all trades on anything PC/phone related (including pulling cables). Inter-company department change - no HR, moved to another company where a friend worked - no HR, company merged with second company - no HR - Opened business - of course no HR, closed business went to work for a client - no HR...

                        Nope, never really dealt with HR myself.

                        Me either, not for getting a job. Dealing with things after being hired, sure. But HR never seems to be in the critical path to getting the offer. Or when it is, it's like just in doing background checks and stuff, but not in the interview process.

                        DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • DashrenderD
                          Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                          @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                          @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                          @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                          It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                          No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                          I haven't been in the job market going through HR in - hmm... ever I guess. First tech job was a bench job, but was pulled off a telemarketing call floor to work it part time as one of the few on the floor who "knew anything about computers" - so no HR for that move, that job became full time jack of all trades on anything PC/phone related (including pulling cables). Inter-company department change - no HR, moved to another company where a friend worked - no HR, company merged with second company - no HR - Opened business - of course no HR, closed business went to work for a client - no HR...

                          Nope, never really dealt with HR myself.

                          Me either, not for getting a job. Dealing with things after being hired, sure. But HR never seems to be in the critical path to getting the offer. Or when it is, it's like just in doing background checks and stuff, but not in the interview process.

                          Sure, but that said - I definitely don't consider this the norm. I mean it might be the norm for someone in your position - where people are seeking you out - but if you have zero contacts at the company - how else are you getting in the door? Do the F500 basically allow the hiring teams to get the resumes directly, and only after they pick a candidate have HR do the checks?

                          IRJI scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • IRJI
                            IRJ @Dashrender
                            last edited by

                            @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                            @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                            @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                            @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                            @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                            It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                            No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                            I haven't been in the job market going through HR in - hmm... ever I guess. First tech job was a bench job, but was pulled off a telemarketing call floor to work it part time as one of the few on the floor who "knew anything about computers" - so no HR for that move, that job became full time jack of all trades on anything PC/phone related (including pulling cables). Inter-company department change - no HR, moved to another company where a friend worked - no HR, company merged with second company - no HR - Opened business - of course no HR, closed business went to work for a client - no HR...

                            Nope, never really dealt with HR myself.

                            Me either, not for getting a job. Dealing with things after being hired, sure. But HR never seems to be in the critical path to getting the offer. Or when it is, it's like just in doing background checks and stuff, but not in the interview process.

                            Sure, but that said - I definitely don't consider this the norm. I mean it might be the norm for someone in your position - where people are seeking you out - but if you have zero contacts at the company - how else are you getting in the door? Do the F500 basically allow the hiring teams to get the resumes directly, and only after they pick a candidate have HR do the checks?

                            It's always filtered with large companies. They almost always pay internal or external recruiters for this. There is no way they are reading through every resume.

                            ObsolesceO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • ObsolesceO
                              Obsolesce @IRJ
                              last edited by Obsolesce

                              @IRJ said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                              @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                              @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                              @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                              @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                              @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                              It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                              No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                              I haven't been in the job market going through HR in - hmm... ever I guess. First tech job was a bench job, but was pulled off a telemarketing call floor to work it part time as one of the few on the floor who "knew anything about computers" - so no HR for that move, that job became full time jack of all trades on anything PC/phone related (including pulling cables). Inter-company department change - no HR, moved to another company where a friend worked - no HR, company merged with second company - no HR - Opened business - of course no HR, closed business went to work for a client - no HR...

                              Nope, never really dealt with HR myself.

                              Me either, not for getting a job. Dealing with things after being hired, sure. But HR never seems to be in the critical path to getting the offer. Or when it is, it's like just in doing background checks and stuff, but not in the interview process.

                              Sure, but that said - I definitely don't consider this the norm. I mean it might be the norm for someone in your position - where people are seeking you out - but if you have zero contacts at the company - how else are you getting in the door? Do the F500 basically allow the hiring teams to get the resumes directly, and only after they pick a candidate have HR do the checks?

                              It's always filtered with large companies. They almost always pay internal or external recruiters for this. There is no way they are reading through every resume.

                              It's only the small companies with no resources who have one HR person filter resumes and forward the ones they like to the hiring manager.

                              For normal companies and medium/large companies, it's as IRJ said.

                              In/external recruiter > hiring manager > all interviews > hr/recruiter.

                              IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                                last edited by

                                @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                                No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                                I haven't been in the job market going through HR in - hmm... ever I guess. First tech job was a bench job, but was pulled off a telemarketing call floor to work it part time as one of the few on the floor who "knew anything about computers" - so no HR for that move, that job became full time jack of all trades on anything PC/phone related (including pulling cables). Inter-company department change - no HR, moved to another company where a friend worked - no HR, company merged with second company - no HR - Opened business - of course no HR, closed business went to work for a client - no HR...

                                Nope, never really dealt with HR myself.

                                Me either, not for getting a job. Dealing with things after being hired, sure. But HR never seems to be in the critical path to getting the offer. Or when it is, it's like just in doing background checks and stuff, but not in the interview process.

                                Sure, but that said - I definitely don't consider this the norm. I mean it might be the norm for someone in your position - where people are seeking you out - but if you have zero contacts at the company - how else are you getting in the door? Do the F500 basically allow the hiring teams to get the resumes directly, and only after they pick a candidate have HR do the checks?

                                Obviously they do neither. They do the sensible thing of using recruiters, who are not HR and don't intentionally keep good candidates away. They do the simple, obvious thing. Why anyone things HR is normally in the chain is beyond me, no one seems to have seem this first hand.

                                I have a feeling that everyone hopes that HR being crazy is the reason why they don't get every job begging for them every time and it makes us feel good to blame HR. But working from the hiring side, only a total imbecile and failing company would ever have it cross their minds to work that way. Someone somewhere has done this, and it's like become that lore that has been accepted as truth because from the IT perspective, much like every end user being a complete idiot, it servers our egos to think HR are all idiots and that explains why we aren't the top pick for every job. But logic, observation, etc. don't support that theory. It's just something that people say and it gets repeated because everyone wants it to be true and it's obviously impossible to actually prove either way.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • IRJI
                                  IRJ @Obsolesce
                                  last edited by

                                  @Obsolesce said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                  @IRJ said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                  @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                  @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                  @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                  @Dashrender said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                  It might be better to say - the places that Scott and elk WANT to work use recruiters...

                                  No, lots of good places don't. But lots of good places do. I think the point was only that HR doesn't play the huge role that people often imagine.

                                  I haven't been in the job market going through HR in - hmm... ever I guess. First tech job was a bench job, but was pulled off a telemarketing call floor to work it part time as one of the few on the floor who "knew anything about computers" - so no HR for that move, that job became full time jack of all trades on anything PC/phone related (including pulling cables). Inter-company department change - no HR, moved to another company where a friend worked - no HR, company merged with second company - no HR - Opened business - of course no HR, closed business went to work for a client - no HR...

                                  Nope, never really dealt with HR myself.

                                  Me either, not for getting a job. Dealing with things after being hired, sure. But HR never seems to be in the critical path to getting the offer. Or when it is, it's like just in doing background checks and stuff, but not in the interview process.

                                  Sure, but that said - I definitely don't consider this the norm. I mean it might be the norm for someone in your position - where people are seeking you out - but if you have zero contacts at the company - how else are you getting in the door? Do the F500 basically allow the hiring teams to get the resumes directly, and only after they pick a candidate have HR do the checks?

                                  It's always filtered with large companies. They almost always pay internal or external recruiters for this. There is no way they are reading through every resume.

                                  It's only the small companies with no resources who have one HR person filter resumes and forward the ones they like to the hiring manager.

                                  Yep and thats the issue many here describe. Recruiters are not cheap, so small businesses dont use them. Even though, we all know the importance of finding a good candidate and how much money it can save in the long run.

                                  The one man IT department is too busy to look over resumes, so HR filters for them. I think this is fairly common.

                                  scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @IRJ
                                    last edited by

                                    @IRJ said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                    Even though, we all know the importance of finding a good candidate and how much money it can save in the long run.

                                    yeah, nothing more important than hiring well! If you "can't afford to treat hiring as a priority", your business can't afford to operate.

                                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • scottalanmillerS
                                      scottalanmiller @IRJ
                                      last edited by scottalanmiller

                                      @IRJ said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                      The one man IT department is too busy to look over resumes

                                      And why are they so busy? Because of a trend of not properly hiring 😉

                                      Having HR screw over the department will just make that worse, not better.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller
                                        last edited by

                                        One a small shop, the number of resumes is small. Not many people apply to work at one person shops. Especially these days. Even larger shops with full IT teams often get nearly zero applications for IT work these days. You have to go seek applicants, they rarely come to you.

                                        IRJI 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • IRJI
                                          IRJ @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                          One a small shop, the number of resumes is small. Not many people apply to work at one person shops. Especially these days. Even larger shops with full IT teams often get nearly zero applications for IT work these days. You have to go seek applicants, they rarely come to you.

                                          You assume they using good job descriptions and revealing the company size

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @IRJ
                                            last edited by

                                            @IRJ said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                            @scottalanmiller said in If not A+, then where should someone start?:

                                            One a small shop, the number of resumes is small. Not many people apply to work at one person shops. Especially these days. Even larger shops with full IT teams often get nearly zero applications for IT work these days. You have to go seek applicants, they rarely come to you.

                                            You assume they using good job descriptions and revealing the company size

                                            Oh, you are assuming a situation where they are posting to job boards. I see, that makes sense. Although I can tell you that even when doing so, you get almost nothing as a smaller shop.

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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