This is the most important video I've seen in years honestly. Straight forward opinions on the subject from a professional, exactly what I was looking for. I was forcing myself to do development, and I hated it honestly, I'm sitting in a T2 position at the moment, in the running for a sysadmin position. However, 3 days ago, I got hit with a skimmer. My bank account got completely wiped out. First time something like this has ever happened. Now I'm eyeing certs and security positions out of pure rage.
Your first IT job was already in pentesting while you were in college? Was it an internship? I assumed you finished your degree? I am trying to get into IT and currently studying A+ in hopes of getting into cybersecurity in the future. But I never finished college and the plan is currently: help desk, network engineer, pentesting like you said. Do you think I would be better off going back to college? Do you think it would open doors for me to get into pentesting faster/easier?
It wasn't an internship but I also don't think that having a degree was what helped the most. I think just having projects/writeups/certs is good enough to get a job
I just got let go of my job and am currently trying to work my way into tech, I have knowledge of Java where I can get by because of classes I took in high school. Is there anything you recommend for someone who has practically no experience in the tech field but has around 10 years of customer service experience? And is there any job you recommend? I was thinking help desk but I’m also not sure of what information I should know to get me by and I feel like because I know almost nothing I won’t last at the job.
This is the most important video I've seen in years honestly. Straight forward opinions on the subject from a professional, exactly what I was looking for.
I was forcing myself to do development, and I hated it honestly, I'm sitting in a T2 position at the moment, in the running for a sysadmin position.
However, 3 days ago, I got hit with a skimmer. My bank account got completely wiped out. First time something like this has ever happened.
Now I'm eyeing certs and security positions out of pure rage.
Thanks a lot for this man!! Quite informative and exactly what I needed as I was hella confused with what cert to go through with
so where does cysa+ land?
Thanks for this Helton!!! I was going for cysa+ this year instead of sec+!
Good luck, you've got this!
Cool Video, glad it was on my recommended.
Great channel i just subscribed i would like to see where CISSP and OSCP ranks on your list
ty for this
these things are confusing af
and the mini explations helps alot otoo
you said you failed the PNPT. with the experience you had of it, how would you say it compared to the eCPPT?
My mistake with PNPT was not scheduling enough time to take it, I will make a video comparing OSCP, ECPPT, and PNPT once I finish OSCP :)
@@GrahamHelton Just bought a voucher for eCPPT & PNPT, don't know what to take first...) Your opinion?
Your first IT job was already in pentesting while you were in college? Was it an internship? I assumed you finished your degree? I am trying to get into IT and currently studying A+ in hopes of getting into cybersecurity in the future. But I never finished college and the plan is currently: help desk, network engineer, pentesting like you said. Do you think I would be better off going back to college? Do you think it would open doors for me to get into pentesting faster/easier?
It wasn't an internship but I also don't think that having a degree was what helped the most. I think just having projects/writeups/certs is good enough to get a job
Best of luck!
Thanks!
I just got let go of my job and am currently trying to work my way into tech, I have knowledge of Java where I can get by because of classes I took in high school. Is there anything you recommend for someone who has practically no experience in the tech field but has around 10 years of customer service experience? And is there any job you recommend? I was thinking help desk but I’m also not sure of what information I should know to get me by and I feel like because I know almost nothing I won’t last at the job.
Learning the content in the A+ is a great place to start if you want to get a helpdesk job. Best of luck!