This guy knows his stuff and is straight. Not sugar coating.. Basically implied don't use any if these paid courses in Udemy etc. The information and technology is free out there. Thanks David, you saved me a lot of money!!
Menu: Top 5 to 10 technologies for learn in 2021: 0:00 Learn the fundamentals: 0:41 How do I learn the fundamentals: 2:05 Important content in CCNA: 2:34 Cumulus Linux: 3:00 Deep Work: 3:30 Do honest work: 4:50 Practical Skills: 5:10 Learn how the cloud works: 5:43 It's all free: 6:22 Learn how to automate: 6:35 Learn Git: 7:28 Cisco, Juniper or Arista: 8:42 Learn the technology: 9:30 Waves to ride: 11:52 Cisco Devnet: 13:13 Advice for younger self: 15:59 I am the smartest person: 18:25 Think first: 18:51 Skills in addition to technology: 19:20 Ivan's dumb decisions (BGP): 20:35 Another story of Ivan's mistakes (EIGRP): 22:21 ============== Book mentioned: ============== Deep Work: amzn.to/3f7Or85 ================ Previous Videos: ================ Any future for Network Engineers: th-cam.com/video/LzooeiGxKis/w-d-xo.html The top 10 skills Network Engineers need to learn in 2019: th-cam.com/video/grS__DS3v7c/w-d-xo.html ================ Connect with Ivan: ================ Website: bit.ly/2Hci4oL Twitter: twitter.com/ioshints LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ivanpepelnjak/ ================ Connect with me: ================ Discord: discord.com/invite/usKSyzb Twitter: twitter.com/davidbombal Instagram: instagram.com/davidbombal LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/davidbombal Facebook: facebook.com/davidbombal.co TikTok: tiktok.com/@davidbombal TH-cam: th-cam.com/users/davidbombal ================ Support me: ================ DavidBombal.com: CCNA ($10): bit.ly/yt999ccna Udemy CCNA Course: bit.ly/ccnafor10dollars GNS3 CCNA Course: CCNA ($10): bit.ly/gns3ccna10 ====================== Special Offers: ====================== Boson software: 15% discount Link: bit.ly/boson15 Code: DBAF15P Please note that links listed may be affiliate links and provide me with a small percentage/kickback should you use them to purchase any of the items listed or recommended. Thank you for supporting me and this channel!
Hey, intro timing getting better! Not cutting people off for the intro is much more pleasant to watch in terms of flow. Also thanks for timestamps sir, useful thing to have.
The beauty of David, is the ability to answer tough and naive questions which any fresher faces during the initial stages of the career. At the same time he is able to explain the trends currently in practice.
Hey David! I recently passed my CCNA after a long while of studying (then giving up) and studying some more. I watched your Udemy class as one of my resources and its one of the main reasons for my success! Thank you so much for sharing all your knowledge!! :)
Today I have failed my Bachelor degree work just because I neglected the subject and gave it too little time to make up for the missing knowledge. This motivates me to change my habbits and start working harder an improve myself. This video is exactly what I need right know. To face the laziness and start working to care more about my future. Thanks David!
@@65gtotrips I hope to be where you are. I'm 37 and started IT a year ago after switching careers. I wrapped up my A+ a month ago and starting N+ now. I hope to get Sec+ and CCNA by the end of the year. I feel I have a lot of catching up to do. My coworkers with 10+ years seem comfortable with not know certain things, I don't have that luxury.
Hello. I want to move from being Business Analyst to something more technical (and less stakeholder mngmt!). I think network engineer seem best path while avoiding hardcore coding. Is NE a viable pathway? Thank you
"Everything you do, there is always something extra you can do to learn something else not just the one thing that you are working on." - Ivan Peppelnjak (this is priceless stuff). Thank you. BTW currently pursuing my CCNA and at time stamp 6:35 - challenge accepted.
4:50 Do Honest Work Hit me hard. "Did I do everything I could do today to get the job done?" There are too many times I will say no to this. I need to get more focused.
I have 28 years experience, and Ivan hits it on the head of what all the newbies need to focus on. Fundamentals and honest work and look yourself in the mirror. Just understand the stuff. Too many of the new people can spout stats , specs, but they just do not understand it and they can't apply it to real world scenarios.
Many cant apply it because they are not getting the oppurtunities to apply it because some hiring managers dont want to work with people with certs despite candidates having a good foundation to work with.
@@jasonbourne1827 Hi Jason. I am curious what your scenario is. I do not quite understand it. I may be able to help. Most of what Ivan said is dead on accurate. I am younger than Ivan, but I have been in networking for 28 years ..... real big, primarily VERY large (tier 1 ) ISPs. If your career is stuck, I might be able to give you an assessment of you skills and why you are not getting hired.
Great advice.. After listening to this I built a Ubuntu Linux server and now us it in my lab instead of windows. I’ve learned a great deal about Linux with this approach. Thanks
Minimum learning time for CCNA according to internet wisdom is 4-6 months and all that just to be called a "CLI jockey". Thanks guys for the motivation offered. Keep up the good work.
This is one of the most important videos I have seen online about a master tell straight the path to success in information technology. Thank you, David and Ivan.
@@davidbombal Just a quick follow-up question though. If I have just GNS3 (free) and/or EVE-NG and I would like to automate the topology I will be creating, how is Ivan doing it just using programming like python for example? I will also check with the website and the details you shared in the interview, but your clarification will be greatly appreciated as well. As Ivan mentioned, I would like to just start building basic configurations and topologies using automation for sure. Thanks in advance.
-Thanks for the content and discussion and I will add the situation of my country and what I imagine is the situation in third world countries in general: 1º- Not even in the first world will CCNA in your apartment install internet who is going to be a guy with minimal knowledge and training, usually a guy only with high school and if the problems are more complicated than his training requires he CALLS FOR ONE CENTRAL WHERE A CCNA RESOLVES WITH IT IF IT DOESN'T RESOLVE REMOTELY, but it is 1 CCNA FOR ENTIRE TEAMS OF MANY, this is because in Call Center there are still service levels where first a lay attendant trained to follow a Script, then comes a more trained and only in the LAST CASE THEY SPEND TO THE SPECIALIST that there can be a CCNA. 2º-I'm looking for a job, and CCNA only makes them look at their CV, but to really apply for a good job as an engineer they want CCNP which without working with Cisco all day, the case of Network Chuck we just see that the CCNP is really for those who are being daily professionals in Cisco and living Cisco. 3rd-I sold things to do my CCNA because it costs two months of work in my country the test and there is no discount and the tests cost money to learn, I took David's Automation Courses I learned Ansible, Python for networks, I am learning Quokka and taking full Python courses and learning Django to try to adapt Quokka for him instead of using Flask, which are great and now, how do you get certified and prove it to an employer ...? -Not even the LPIC which is the Linux certification of an .ORG costs less than 300 dollars and the minimum wage here does not reach 200 dollars. -And the worst to be worth it and leave my country where the profession of network engineer does not even exist and go to a better country in the 1st world. -David himself said in his video that he left South Africa for England because he was CCIE and knew the latest Cisco technology at the time that was IP telephony and not by the university he had in South Africa. -And in times of Pandemic a lot of jobs worsened without even hiring people I went through it. -So I candidate in Europe and Canada with my profile I applied and in which the person really answered there were cases where they said this one with the work visa we will make an appointment if you are not there when you come here let us know. -In summary companies are not doing charity they want a professional to come and do what they need, which includes technologies that are at CCNA, CCNA charges things that Cisco and the jobs charges like DNA, SDwan, in short they want someone ready and that no additional expenses are spent to hire, so this is the real world in which I am applying on Linkedin. -I am making myself a victim or doing drama, or exaggerating let's prove it then, ok ...? -I'm going to do a challenge make a video creating a profile on Linkedin like mine: -One professional from an emerging country like Brazil, India, South Africa, or any African or Arab country. -With CCNA, JNCIA, the first two from Fortinet that are free of charge NSE 1 and 2. -But the knowledge of free courses and try to send now in the CV pandemic for jobs of network engineer 100 CVs in the country of the profile, keep in Brazil that there is no profession Network Engineer has a Network Analyst who is a Systems Analyst with CCNA ( mix everything). -100 CVs for Europe, USA, Canada for the same guy, need to sponsor for a work visa. -And just look at the result. -No CCNP on CV, no interview for international job, and in your country it is difficult because they want a professional with knowledge beyond CCNA charges. -If you don't make this video, I will make and publish it myself, to show its not easy in first word countries as are here in the pour countries. -Why what really matters and what you have to learn is what appears to be being asked for in the Linkedin vacancies and jobs around there, isn't it ...? -The interview I want to see is from a Network Engineer like me from a poor country who immigrated as I want to the first world for work with an employer-sponsored work visa, now in the pandemic. -I wonder what this guy studied and did. -I at least kill myself from studying hours a day seeing things at home to get a better job and a better life for me and my family right ...? -Thanks for the video....!!!
"The pie chart diagram, every supplier has to get certain percentage of the business, so no one will complain. Layer 9 or 10, right? In the OSI model." HAHAHA, so loved that!!! :)))
Given the rampant cheating on certs, make sure if you have a cert you are able to perform the type of things tested for when you obtained the cert. For candidates with CCNA/CCNP in particular, part of the interview process for us is sit them down in front of a mini hands on lab with half a dozen tasks to work through to prove that they actually possess the skills they are 'certified' to have. For straight network engineering, presentation skills aren't as important. If you are comfortable in front of people, can communicate technical concepts in a way that quasi-technical decision makers can understand, and can marry technical solutions to the business problems they solve then you should try and find a presales engineering position. The pay is better because you are closer to the sales side of the organization, and the night/weekend work should disappear entirely. Don't get talked in to playing a pre/post sales role, either. All it does is stress you out because either sales people are pissed that you are unavailable due to client obligations or clients are pissed because you are unavailable sitting in sales meetings. 25 years doing all of the above and more. Take it for what it's worth and good luck!
Good question to answer in one of the shows would be to compare someone with CCIE Security + PaloAlto + F5 etc.. vs someone with CEH, OSCP etc... To compare it in terms of compensation, job security and future outlook.
Great video. This is why I'm a subscriber. I tend to find interviews where certain questions slip through; and I find myself missing very specific pieces that connect the overall discussion. David Bombal is precise and clear on his questions and a wonderful educator. I can't thank you enough my internet friend. Thank you. Thank you.
I remember as a kid… using air snort and cain & abel thinking I was bad ass…. Now I’m a retired military vet. Getting 6 grand a month and I didn’t need to know any of this crap… yet I love it 😎 and I still know~
Sir you are one of the best person I have ever see on TH-cam in terms of uploading important and useful videos, you are too knowledgeable , you are really awesome, GOD bless you and your family
"Learn the fundamentals, cloud, linux and automation. Remember to listen and think before act." My takeaway, I'm learning a lot with you. I know where I want to go in tech now and I started my journey thanks to you. Thank you But how do you deal with those moments when life(family, jobs, etc) slows you down ? any advice ?
It can be difficult, but remember that Rome wasn't built in a day. It takes time to learn all this stuff. Some people are quicker than others. I like to do this: Try to learn at least one new thing a day. Doing that quickly adds up.
He is very good, a real practical guy. I love he says he doesnt care about Certs. True certs are nothing but an achievement. You might need them to get your foot in the door but the skills behind it what counts :) Still I prefer going for certs coz i need some validation but not just for the sake of certs.
I am definitely going to take heed in all of this knowledge given in this video. We definitely appreciate it. It was well worth every minute. Now I have a better plan of attack.
Unfortunately the biggest problem today faced by ICT individuals seeking to learn and advance is to 'design the path' out of the large pool of techs out there. Job postings now a days demand such randomized modern skills out of an individual, which makes the learning path really dreadful, demotivating and depressing. One may be thinking they are designing their best path by their google searches but it may possibly go all down the drain. Even if we try find mentors, they too claim to be learners which is a good thing. This is the Achilles heel of this industry for a common individual alone in the tech sea. Please do few more of such videos by experienced mentors so that it can help ICT people crave their learning paths, which will not be the same for each individual.
That was really helpful, as I just got my MSc degree and was thinking of improving my skills, knowledge before applying for a network engineer position. knowing that on my thesis I was working on Network automation solution for resource allocation.
17:37 - 19:20 I agree with everything but that gif meme @18:44 was on point.🤭😄 🤍 that listen instead of hearing bit too. 24:04 - 24:09 Funny you mentioned the "tongue-in-cheek(ly)" Layers 9 & 10 of the OSI model.😜
I understand the frustration. Remember that Rome wasn't built in a day. It takes time to learn this stuff. Some people are quicker than others. I like to do this: Try to learn at least one new thing a day. Doing that quickly adds up.
Who has 3 to 4 hours to work on a problem? If your working 50 or 60 hours a week your not going to go home to spend 3 or 4 hours on something, sorry but that’s not real world
This is 2 years old but I have to put my 2 cents in too. David asks how do people get started. What certs should people get. This dude is basically like certs are garbage. You should start by knowing everything. Then after you learn everything on day one go to day two build a $20,000 home lab and know how everything works perfectly. Then on day 3 I will call you up and tell you how dumb you are compared to me and you disgust the networking gods. It just annoys me when super smart people think everyone needs to be on their level or just GTFO.
It's amazing Dave you know right when to send me time for a new path.parole officer just stopped by told me to go up to the police station and turn myself in I'm going back to prison.ill continue my lessons in anywhere from 4mo-7years
Snobbish towards certs. Certs demonstrate you are knowledgeable. If you got a degree it demonstrates you are knowledgeable. Some IT people seem snobbish but i bet you if i didnt have any certs or a degree i wouldnt get a call back. We can agree that certs doesnt say you can sit down as a network engineer day 1 but it does say you know alot and have a good foundation to work with, applying that knowledge is key and hiring managers should assist new hires in that process and not just dismiss candidates with certs.
David i watched your all gns3 video and they are amazing you are great mentor for me. In past few days i have learned so much things about networking all because of you. So, thank you so much ♥️
Started with CCNA, finally got it. After all the back and forth, and having the sh*t scared outta me about the future of the network engineer, I just switched to security. Feels like a weight has been lifted 😌
Great Video. Thank You. I'll definitely set up the recommended lab. A lot of things to learn, but it will surely make me understand technologies better.
Great content on networking once again. Thanks for sharing these interviews. They are very helpful .. helping me plan my pathway after uni. Thanks once again
Hi David, awesome interviews. I really like Ivans responses. There’s one term I don’t understand “CLI Jackie”. I’m new to this Networking but from my learnings, I understand CLI to be the main way of interacting with switches and routers.
CLI Jockey - in other words, someone who only knows how to type commands into a CLI like Cisco CLI, but doesn't actually understand why they are doing things.
@@davidbombal Thank you for the clarification. I was under the assumption that to qualify to sit behind a CLI, a person would need to be fully aware of what each command is doing. Don't be a CLI Jockey, copy.
He had my heart at "Who's gonna fix that? The Python guys?..." hahaha - Love it! Basics are important!
Agreed John :)
Rightttt - I wish he was my teacher…in person. His voice makes me feel u will conquer it all!
What is your suggestion for someone who loves Networking and Automation but doesn't like cloud???
Love how Ivan speaks and tells his stories!
Cutting the riff raff and to the point. I love it too
lol it's hilariously catchy
This guy knows his stuff and is straight. Not sugar coating.. Basically implied don't use any if these paid courses in Udemy etc. The information and technology is free out there. Thanks David, you saved me a lot of money!!
Menu:
Top 5 to 10 technologies for learn in 2021: 0:00
Learn the fundamentals: 0:41
How do I learn the fundamentals: 2:05
Important content in CCNA: 2:34
Cumulus Linux: 3:00
Deep Work: 3:30
Do honest work: 4:50
Practical Skills: 5:10
Learn how the cloud works: 5:43
It's all free: 6:22
Learn how to automate: 6:35
Learn Git: 7:28
Cisco, Juniper or Arista: 8:42
Learn the technology: 9:30
Waves to ride: 11:52
Cisco Devnet: 13:13
Advice for younger self: 15:59
I am the smartest person: 18:25
Think first: 18:51
Skills in addition to technology: 19:20
Ivan's dumb decisions (BGP): 20:35
Another story of Ivan's mistakes (EIGRP): 22:21
==============
Book mentioned:
==============
Deep Work: amzn.to/3f7Or85
================
Previous Videos:
================
Any future for Network Engineers: th-cam.com/video/LzooeiGxKis/w-d-xo.html
The top 10 skills Network Engineers need to learn in 2019: th-cam.com/video/grS__DS3v7c/w-d-xo.html
================
Connect with Ivan:
================
Website: bit.ly/2Hci4oL
Twitter: twitter.com/ioshints
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/ivanpepelnjak/
================
Connect with me:
================
Discord: discord.com/invite/usKSyzb
Twitter: twitter.com/davidbombal
Instagram: instagram.com/davidbombal
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/davidbombal
Facebook: facebook.com/davidbombal.co
TikTok: tiktok.com/@davidbombal
TH-cam: th-cam.com/users/davidbombal
================
Support me:
================
DavidBombal.com: CCNA ($10): bit.ly/yt999ccna
Udemy CCNA Course: bit.ly/ccnafor10dollars
GNS3 CCNA Course: CCNA ($10): bit.ly/gns3ccna10
======================
Special Offers:
======================
Boson software: 15% discount
Link: bit.ly/boson15
Code: DBAF15P
Please note that links listed may be affiliate links and provide me with a small percentage/kickback should you use them to purchase any of the items listed or recommended. Thank you for supporting me and this channel!
Hey, intro timing getting better! Not cutting people off for the intro is much more pleasant to watch in terms of flow. Also thanks for timestamps sir, useful thing to have.
Thanks dad!
You can tell he doesn't really care about certs, but they do help you learn and will certainly get you past HR gatekeeping to get interviews.
I discuss this in this video: th-cam.com/video/LW56JL4Jsig/w-d-xo.html
The beauty of David, is the ability to answer tough and naive questions which any fresher faces during the initial stages of the career.
At the same time he is able to explain the trends currently in practice.
Thank you Shankar :)
Hey David! I recently passed my CCNA after a long while of studying (then giving up) and studying some more. I watched your Udemy class as one of my resources and its one of the main reasons for my success! Thank you so much for sharing all your knowledge!! :)
Good because I bought David's CCNA few days ago. Im counting that he will help me with tough subjects
@@DEDEPLDEDE good luck - check out Deep Work, it'll make your progress much smoother.
What is your suggestion for someone who loves Networking and Automation but doesn't like cloud???
@@chris76706 what is deep work sir?
Ivan is a real treasure to our field of work. Love his blogs/articles.
I like how David brought him back to the subject. Love the interview skills
Thank you Fahad :)
Today I have failed my Bachelor degree work just because I neglected the subject and gave it too little time to make up for the missing knowledge. This motivates me to change my habbits and start working harder an improve myself. This video is exactly what I need right know. To face the laziness and start working to care more about my future. Thanks David!
How did you fail in one day?
I was literally lost in this web since a day looking for such content. Now I know what to do and how..... Thank you so much
Nothing short of amazing. I've been following you and Ivan for years and the core advice doesn't change: understand TCP/IP.
Thank you!
I finished my CCNA and am finishing my CCNP now and have a huge ambitious plan. This was certainly motivating and very interesting!
That is my plan also, good luck!
This will never get old. This is an advice we can take forever.
best words of wisdom he said, "honest work" honest to your own self
Ivan really inspired me! His wisdom is critical for all of us in IT.
When I'm successful I'll never be arrogant like as Ivan.
I'll be a good humble person like David. That's my real dream and drive.
If you love what you do, things seems so easy. Great work David thanks.
You're welcome Luis!
Learning how to learn is very practical!
Agreed. Deep work is a great book.
Definitely watching this as Network engineer is my dream job. Cheers!
Go for it! Hope the video helps you :)
I am 56yo almost 30years in IT Industry and you still inspire me to go on learning
Thanks a lot
Really happy to hear that Alexandros.
🔰 I’m with you there...I’m 58 1/2 with 20+ years in IT proper...
@@65gtotrips I hope to be where you are. I'm 37 and started IT a year ago after switching careers. I wrapped up my A+ a month ago and starting N+ now. I hope to get Sec+ and CCNA by the end of the year. I feel I have a lot of catching up to do. My coworkers with 10+ years seem comfortable with not know certain things, I don't have that luxury.
Hello. I want to move from being Business Analyst to something more technical (and less stakeholder mngmt!). I think network engineer seem best path while avoiding hardcore coding.
Is NE a viable pathway? Thank you
“The most important thing is sincerity. Once you can fake that, you’ve got it made.”
Thanks to you, I figured out the direction I want to take in life... Thank you
You're welcome!
Thanks for bringing us the Chuck Black's, Neil Bridges, Ivan's of the world. Well appreciated!
You're welcome :)
So much this.
"Everything you do, there is always something extra you can do to learn something else not just the one thing that you are working on." - Ivan Peppelnjak (this is priceless stuff). Thank you.
BTW currently pursuing my CCNA and at time stamp 6:35 - challenge accepted.
Glad you enjoyed the video Bernard! It's a great challenge and can really help you.
can you tell me what GUI mean if I use cisco packet tracer is that a GUI?
4:50 Do Honest Work Hit me hard. "Did I do everything I could do today to get the job done?"
There are too many times I will say no to this. I need to get more focused.
You cannot change the past, but you can change your future.
I have 28 years experience, and Ivan hits it on the head of what all the newbies need to focus on. Fundamentals and honest work and look yourself in the mirror. Just understand the stuff. Too many of the new people can spout stats , specs, but they just do not understand it and they can't apply it to real world scenarios.
Thank you for sharing! Great to hear this from others who have lots of experience.
Many cant apply it because they are not getting the oppurtunities to apply it because some hiring managers dont want to work with people with certs despite candidates having a good foundation to work with.
@@jasonbourne1827 Hi Jason. I am curious what your scenario is. I do not quite understand it. I may be able to help. Most of what Ivan said is dead on accurate. I am younger than Ivan, but I have been in networking for 28 years ..... real big, primarily VERY large (tier 1 ) ISPs. If your career is stuck, I might be able to give you an assessment of you skills and why you are not getting hired.
Great advice.. After listening to this I built a Ubuntu Linux server and now us it in my lab instead of windows. I’ve learned a great deal about Linux with this approach. Thanks
Minimum learning time for CCNA according to internet wisdom is 4-6 months and all that just to be called a "CLI jockey". Thanks guys for the motivation offered. Keep up the good work.
I really loved how Ivan spoke and described about the real must needed fundamentals of IT
If you got time for gym to build muscle then you have time build your brain muscles too, thank you guys.
Exactly :)
This is one of the most important videos I have seen online about a master tell straight the path to success in information technology. Thank you, David and Ivan.
Thank you Jair. Ivan is an amazing guy :)
@@davidbombal Just a quick follow-up question though. If I have just GNS3 (free) and/or EVE-NG and I would like to automate the topology I will be creating, how is Ivan doing it just using programming like python for example? I will also check with the website and the details you shared in the interview, but your clarification will be greatly appreciated as well. As Ivan mentioned, I would like to just start building basic configurations and topologies using automation for sure. Thanks in advance.
-Thanks for the content and discussion and I will add the situation of my country and what I imagine is the situation in third world countries in general:
1º- Not even in the first world will CCNA in your apartment install internet who is going to be a guy with minimal knowledge and training, usually a guy only with high school and if the problems are more complicated than his training requires he CALLS FOR ONE CENTRAL WHERE A CCNA RESOLVES WITH IT IF IT DOESN'T RESOLVE REMOTELY, but it is 1 CCNA FOR ENTIRE TEAMS OF MANY, this is because in Call Center there are still service levels where first a lay attendant trained to follow a Script, then comes a more trained and only in the LAST CASE THEY SPEND TO THE SPECIALIST that there can be a CCNA.
2º-I'm looking for a job, and CCNA only makes them look at their CV, but to really apply for a good job as an engineer they want CCNP which without working with Cisco all day, the case of Network Chuck we just see that the CCNP is really for those who are being daily professionals in Cisco and living Cisco.
3rd-I sold things to do my CCNA because it costs two months of work in my country the test and there is no discount and the tests cost money to learn, I took David's Automation Courses I learned Ansible, Python for networks, I am learning Quokka and taking full Python courses and learning Django to try to adapt Quokka for him instead of using Flask, which are great and now, how do you get certified and prove it to an employer ...?
-Not even the LPIC which is the Linux certification of an .ORG costs less than 300 dollars and the minimum wage here does not reach 200 dollars.
-And the worst to be worth it and leave my country where the profession of network engineer does not even exist and go to a better country in the 1st world.
-David himself said in his video that he left South Africa for England because he was CCIE and knew the latest Cisco technology at the time that was IP telephony and not by the university he had in South Africa.
-And in times of Pandemic a lot of jobs worsened without even hiring people I went through it.
-So I candidate in Europe and Canada with my profile I applied and in which the person really answered there were cases where they said this one with the work visa we will make an appointment if you are not there when you come here let us know.
-In summary companies are not doing charity they want a professional to come and do what they need, which includes technologies that are at CCNA, CCNA charges things that Cisco and the jobs charges like DNA, SDwan, in short they want someone ready and that no additional expenses are spent to hire, so this is the real world in which I am applying on Linkedin.
-I am making myself a victim or doing drama, or exaggerating let's prove it then, ok ...?
-I'm going to do a challenge make a video creating a profile on Linkedin like mine:
-One professional from an emerging country like Brazil, India, South Africa, or any African or Arab country.
-With CCNA, JNCIA, the first two from Fortinet that are free of charge NSE 1 and 2.
-But the knowledge of free courses and try to send now in the CV pandemic for jobs of network engineer 100 CVs in the country of the profile, keep in Brazil that there is no profession Network Engineer has a Network Analyst who is a Systems Analyst with CCNA ( mix everything).
-100 CVs for Europe, USA, Canada for the same guy, need to sponsor for a work visa.
-And just look at the result.
-No CCNP on CV, no interview for international job, and in your country it is difficult because they want a professional with knowledge beyond CCNA charges.
-If you don't make this video, I will make and publish it myself, to show its not easy in first word countries as are here in the pour countries.
-Why what really matters and what you have to learn is what appears to be being asked for in the Linkedin vacancies and jobs around there, isn't it ...?
-The interview I want to see is from a Network Engineer like me from a poor country who immigrated as I want to the first world for work with an employer-sponsored work visa, now in the pandemic.
-I wonder what this guy studied and did.
-I at least kill myself from studying hours a day seeing things at home to get a better job and a better life for me and my family right ...?
-Thanks for the video....!!!
"The pie chart diagram, every supplier has to get certain percentage of the business, so no one will complain. Layer 9 or 10, right? In the OSI model." HAHAHA, so loved that!!! :)))
Given the rampant cheating on certs, make sure if you have a cert you are able to perform the type of things tested for when you obtained the cert. For candidates with CCNA/CCNP in particular, part of the interview process for us is sit them down in front of a mini hands on lab with half a dozen tasks to work through to prove that they actually possess the skills they are 'certified' to have.
For straight network engineering, presentation skills aren't as important. If you are comfortable in front of people, can communicate technical concepts in a way that quasi-technical decision makers can understand, and can marry technical solutions to the business problems they solve then you should try and find a presales engineering position. The pay is better because you are closer to the sales side of the organization, and the night/weekend work should disappear entirely.
Don't get talked in to playing a pre/post sales role, either. All it does is stress you out because either sales people are pissed that you are unavailable due to client obligations or clients are pissed because you are unavailable sitting in sales meetings.
25 years doing all of the above and more. Take it for what it's worth and good luck!
Good question to answer in one of the shows would be to compare someone with CCIE Security + PaloAlto + F5 etc.. vs someone with CEH, OSCP etc... To compare it in terms of compensation, job security and future outlook.
Great suggestion :)
Great video. This is why I'm a subscriber. I tend to find interviews where certain questions slip through; and I find myself missing very specific pieces that connect the overall discussion. David Bombal is precise and clear on his questions and a wonderful educator. I can't thank you enough my internet friend.
Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you Zachary. And you're welcome :)
I remember as a kid… using air snort and cain & abel thinking I was bad ass…. Now I’m a retired military vet. Getting 6 grand a month and I didn’t need to know any of this crap… yet
I love it 😎 and I still know~
What does he mean from 07:00? I don’t understand. May you please clarify?
Hey Davis: This man draws a grim picture. A defiant grouch!
Pepe is the top net guru and DBombal is the top tech teacher! My hat down.
Loved your conversation with Ivan.He's so real. Keep them coming David. Nailed it.
Thank you Ben
i just love you david !!! thank you for bringing this nurde !!
Thank you 1000 fois for this precious interview with this grate man!!
Stay humble. Ask questions.
Don't panic when you break it.
Sir you are one of the best person I have ever see on TH-cam in terms of uploading important and useful videos, you are too knowledgeable , you are really awesome, GOD bless you and your family
Thank you! I really appreciate that!
@@davidbombal you truly deserve it
This conversation is absolutely outstanding, amazing! Thanks David Bombal.
It's 2:15 AM in India and still watching your video,
Love from India, 😊😊😊😊
wow! I appreciate that! But, go to sleep. You can watch the video in the morning :)
"Learn the fundamentals, cloud, linux and automation. Remember to listen and think before act."
My takeaway, I'm learning a lot with you.
I know where I want to go in tech now and I started my journey thanks to you. Thank you
But how do you deal with those moments when life(family, jobs, etc) slows you down ? any advice ?
It can be difficult, but remember that Rome wasn't built in a day. It takes time to learn all this stuff. Some people are quicker than others. I like to do this: Try to learn at least one new thing a day. Doing that quickly adds up.
roger that!
thank you, I'll remember it!
What is your suggestion for someone who loves Networking and Automation but doesn't like cloud???
He is very good, a real practical guy. I love he says he doesnt care about Certs. True certs are nothing but an achievement. You might need them to get your foot in the door but the skills behind it what counts :) Still I prefer going for certs coz i need some validation but not just for the sake of certs.
WoW, Thank you for this amazing interview.
Thank you Antonio. Glad you enjoyed the video :)
This was really good details and clearing the vague paths choosing careers in IT
Thanks both Ivan and David
I am definitely going to take heed in all of this knowledge given in this video. We definitely appreciate it. It was well worth every minute. Now I have a better plan of attack.
Currently studying for my CCNA!!!💪🏿💪🏿💪🏿
9:02 do u want to be a cli jockey or an engineer? Loved it!
Ivan is great - just no beating around the bush with him - straight to the point :)
Unfortunately the biggest problem today faced by ICT individuals seeking to learn and advance is to 'design the path' out of the large pool of techs out there. Job postings now a days demand such randomized modern skills out of an individual, which makes the learning path really dreadful, demotivating and depressing. One may be thinking they are designing their best path by their google searches but it may possibly go all down the drain. Even if we try find mentors, they too claim to be learners which is a good thing.
This is the Achilles heel of this industry for a common individual alone in the tech sea.
Please do few more of such videos by experienced mentors so that it can help ICT people crave their learning paths, which will not be the same for each individual.
That was really helpful, as I just got my MSc degree and was thinking of improving my skills, knowledge before applying for a network engineer position.
knowing that on my thesis I was working on Network automation solution for resource allocation.
At 38 years old draughtsman looking to change careers. Will CCNA be the best place to start? My path that I have in mind is CCNA > Azure
17:37 - 19:20
I agree with everything but that gif meme @18:44 was on point.🤭😄 🤍 that listen instead of hearing bit too.
24:04 - 24:09
Funny you mentioned the "tongue-in-cheek(ly)" Layers 9 & 10 of the OSI model.😜
Glad I've watch this video... Thanks David. Learning fundamentals is the best foundation.
Is wish i had the amount of free time required to learn this much right now. I envy the people who do.
I understand the frustration. Remember that Rome wasn't built in a day. It takes time to learn this stuff. Some people are quicker than others. I like to do this: Try to learn at least one new thing a day. Doing that quickly adds up.
@@davidbombal David thank you for this one... Im not younger anymore (40 th years Now) do you think it is an issue?
Two of the best from the industry. Good video!!
Who has 3 to 4 hours to work on a problem? If your working 50 or 60 hours a week your not going to go home to spend 3 or 4 hours on something, sorry but that’s not real world
This is 2 years old but I have to put my 2 cents in too. David asks how do people get started. What certs should people get. This dude is basically like certs are garbage. You should start by knowing everything. Then after you learn everything on day one go to day two build a $20,000 home lab and know how everything works perfectly. Then on day 3 I will call you up and tell you how dumb you are compared to me and you disgust the networking gods.
It just annoys me when super smart people think everyone needs to be on their level or just GTFO.
I’m a otr truck driver who works 60 to 70 hours per week and study 2 to 3 hours when I get done working. You have to learn to sleep faster…lol
It's amazing Dave you know right when to send me time for a new path.parole officer just stopped by told me to go up to the police station and turn myself in I'm going back to prison.ill continue my lessons in anywhere from 4mo-7years
Sorry to hear that :( Never give up.
Sorry to hear this mate, hopefully me leaving this reply will give you a reminder once you get out so you can get on the right track!
Snobbish towards certs. Certs demonstrate you are knowledgeable. If you got a degree it demonstrates you are knowledgeable. Some IT people seem snobbish but i bet you if i didnt have any certs or a degree i wouldnt get a call back. We can agree that certs doesnt say you can sit down as a network engineer day 1 but it does say you know alot and have a good foundation to work with, applying that knowledge is key and hiring managers should assist new hires in that process and not just dismiss candidates with certs.
David i watched your all gns3 video and they are amazing you are great mentor for me. In past few days i have learned so much things about networking all because of you. So, thank you so much ♥️
Started with CCNA, finally got it. After all the back and forth, and having the sh*t scared outta me about the future of the network engineer, I just switched to security. Feels like a weight has been lifted 😌
Thank you for sharing these interviews David! :)
Theses videos are so helpful. The cloud took me by surprise. So I learning that in conjunction with CCNA material.
Go for it Ernst!
Lovely. Thank you for this talk.
I'm laughing with layer 9/10 example 😂
Very enjoyable to listen to your conversation. 😊
Love it , This video covering far beyond thing instead only for Network Engineer !!!!
The normal curve distribution at 2:17 of what’s considered good is hilarious.
Never stop to learn, totally agreed..David...
You really helped me to make my choice thank you sir
thankyou very much, its opened up my mind
Great video! Ivan is amazing. Thanks, David.
Big fan sir.
Wish to start your CCNA soon.
🔰 What does Ivan say at 1:06❓ What is Quick❓Is that what he said❓
TCP / QUIC: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QUIC and blog.cloudflare.com/the-road-to-quic/
Thankyou David for making this video I really needed it To decide my career goal.
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
after CCNA I suggest you learn Linux and DevOp these 2 bebies covers everything.
Both fantastic skills to get after CCNA.
@@davidbombal Thanks,but you are not responding my request on Likindin.
Look for a problem, focus on the problem and work on the problem. Its only cost you time.👌
Ivan is a legend his book about mpls is the best
Top video! Thank you David! (I like this style of dividing an interview into small parts of max 30 min)
Thank you Alexandru :) Glad you like this style.
Excellent both of you guys I really get more information about network sides thanks lot for arrange this type of videos🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰👍👍👍👍
Big thanks 👍❤️.If we could have one for ethical hacker.
So inspiring, I’m glad I found your channel, looking forward to learn more of Networking for my career, thanks David!
Welcome aboard Alberto!
Thank you!
Thank you for this video - Ivan and David
This is a really great, it motivates me to keep pushing. Thank you
Awesome advice and great content! Thanks David
Thank you Nicholas
Great work sir David. You are the best
Great Video. Thank You. I'll definitely set up the recommended lab. A lot of things to learn, but it will surely make me understand technologies better.
Quality interview with quality information
Great content on networking once again. Thanks for sharing these interviews. They are very helpful .. helping me plan my pathway after uni. Thanks once again
You're welcome. And happy to hear you are enjoying the videos :)
Really Awesome David, a bomb of thanks to you and you inspiring deeds
Thank you this will surely help me in the future!
Thank you for watching!
Thank you for sharing this interviews David...
Hi David, awesome interviews. I really like Ivans responses. There’s one term I don’t understand “CLI Jackie”.
I’m new to this Networking but from my learnings, I understand CLI to be the main way of interacting with switches and routers.
CLI Jockey - in other words, someone who only knows how to type commands into a CLI like Cisco CLI, but doesn't actually understand why they are doing things.
@@davidbombal Thank you for the clarification. I was under the assumption that to qualify to sit behind a CLI, a person would need to be fully aware of what each command is doing. Don't be a CLI Jockey, copy.
wow, this was excellent! thank you.
Thanks for your information sharing 👍❤️❤️sir
This is really good content David, really good!!, thank you