ducklite
<font color=teal>Take the Poly, it's fabulous!<br>
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2000
- Messages
- 33,487
I'm in the process of writing an employment ad for the company I work for. Here's what I'd like to share...
Required Education/Exerience:
Related discipline Certificate from Technical School and one year experience; OR
MCSA certification and one year experience; OR
Degree in computer science and minimum one year experience; OR
Three years relevant experience.
My ideal candidate is #1, and #2 is my second. In all honesty, the one with a degree is my last choice. Why?
Because first of all I think they will want more money than they are worth (to this company), and will not want to pitch in as part of a team on non-I/T projects that sometimes we all have to help out with. (As an example, a few weeks back I needed to stick address labels on 1500 envelopes. Everyone in the office pitched in to help, even though the project had nothing to do with payroll, HR, AP/AR, or anything else they all work on.)
I also think that just because they've got a degree doesn't mean they've really got any "real world" experience. This job doesn't require knowledge of history or a second language, so much of the knowledge gained in "college" is useless to me as a hiring manager. I'd rather have someone who spent 18 months getting hands-on training on specifically the job I need them to do.
Anne
Required Education/Exerience:
Related discipline Certificate from Technical School and one year experience; OR
MCSA certification and one year experience; OR
Degree in computer science and minimum one year experience; OR
Three years relevant experience.
My ideal candidate is #1, and #2 is my second. In all honesty, the one with a degree is my last choice. Why?
Because first of all I think they will want more money than they are worth (to this company), and will not want to pitch in as part of a team on non-I/T projects that sometimes we all have to help out with. (As an example, a few weeks back I needed to stick address labels on 1500 envelopes. Everyone in the office pitched in to help, even though the project had nothing to do with payroll, HR, AP/AR, or anything else they all work on.)
I also think that just because they've got a degree doesn't mean they've really got any "real world" experience. This job doesn't require knowledge of history or a second language, so much of the knowledge gained in "college" is useless to me as a hiring manager. I'd rather have someone who spent 18 months getting hands-on training on specifically the job I need them to do.
Anne
