How can I break into IT?
My background is in finance but the over last year I've been working heavily with programming languages with my most recent job. I find it far more satisfying than cranking out shitty spreadsheet reports. The problem is I don't have any credentials to back up my skill set.
Should I get certifications? I don't even mind taking a pay cut if it gives me an opportunity to learn.
>>1839122
Programming is always fun but IT is boring as fuck...
>>1839122
I went to VoTech for A+ and Net+ certifications, got hired at a Help Desk, and quit after 9 years of being passed over for advancements. Now I hate computers and am aiming for a low-tech simple life farming out west.
>>1839135
Aiming more for the programming. Staying away from tech support
>>1839122
IT is nigger tier wagecuckery
Think customer service but with computers.
If you're not aiming to be a Level 1 grunt then youd better move to India since almost all development/enginerring positions in any IT company is outsourced and offshored to pajeets who make $3 usd a day.
>>1839175
I guess let me restate that....I meant programming
>>1839122
My path was data entry to learning SQL. Then I got into some light programming and eventually security making over 6 figures. Get positioned and have a good attitude.
This is the key here:
>>1839197
>eventually
Pay cut? You will take a pay cut that you will probably not like. Unless you can find a job that does programming as well as finance to bridge the career paths, otherwise you will start at the bottom of the ladder. These do exist in trading and banking firms, you would need programming certs to prove proficiency. The advice above about the Pajeet penalty for entering IT is very relevant and is the general landscape though you might beat it with a specific position that you already may have have most of the skills for. HR hiring is about career progression, same in IT as anywhere else
Apply to be a network administrator....its a bullshit job you'll be troubleshooting computers and shit but pay is ok and you can take all your certs there as you rank up.
>>1839122
Lie bruh. No one is going to check shit. Just make sure you can do the job, or learn fast.
>>1839194
I've gotten a (programming) job and freelance contracts lying about a degree, the stacks I've worked with, companies I've done work for, etc.
Developers will look down on you if you advertise your A+ or whatever, don't do it.
"IT" is a huge field and despite what people ITT are saying it's more than desktop support.
What do you specifically want to do?
>>1839122
Analyst positions. Data Analyst. Operations Analyst. Ect.
>>1839336
>relatively low stress and that pays moderately well
Define both of those.
You could go work for a smallish company (500 or so employees), automate everything, and chill. But you'll probably only make 50-70k there and have no room to advance.
Unfortunately, if you want to make decent money you need to work for a big enterprise or for some sort of IT consultant/engineering firm. Pretty easy to make 6 figures - the senior engineer I work under made about $180k last time I asked and he just got another raise. The downside is that you need to know your shit inside and out (whatever "your shit" is) and be able to be a rockstar for your company or your clients.
IMO it's not worth the effort and I'm probably going to start looking for one of those cushy small business jobs I mentioned.
>>1839387
If I can make 80k and 40 hours I'm golden. It'll give me time relax and pursue other things of needed. Right now I make about 70k working 45-50 hours but I hate the work.
>>1839387
To piggy back off of this anon; I work in IT (Network Engineer/Sys Admin) and make 75k. If you want low stress, avoid startups and or very small teams/companies. You'll be constantly working and on call in addition to non-stop competition among your peers. Aim for a mid-size company like anon here said where duties are fairly balanced among all of the techs and 40 hour work weeks are the norm. I like what I do but I'm fucking miserable working 50-55 hour weeks. I have a newborn baby boy that I want nothing more than to spend more time with man.
>>1839122
have you tried restarting your computer
>>1839122
>falling for the digital jew
>>1839158
Then why are you trying to get into IT?
>>1839122
You could try to get a consultant job in ERP systems like SAP. Your financial background might be helpful, and if you show interest in it they will most likely teach you programming.
>>1840075
i was always thinking about it, there are some jobs that are mostly sap data entry is it a good start?
>>1839280
>I've gotten a (programming) job and freelance contracts lying about a degree, the stacks I've worked with, companies I've done work for, etc.
I have huge problems going into freelance, i mean i worked as programmer for 2-3 years. How to you pitch/sell yourself?
>>1840044
Because he doesn't know what IT is.
>>1839122
Most companies give you a test, there are many decent programmers with no certs. Some branches however you need then.If you want networking, get Cisco certification. Database admin, Oracle and or Microsoft sql certification.
being chad while working in mcdonalds and barebacking sluts like OP's pic > your entire life
>>1840115
I probably wouldn't be dealing with networking or databases. I do like the idea of automating tasks. I think back to all of my old jobs and how fucking tedious most of the tasks were.
>>1841576
Get on a freelancing site like Upwork or Guru and get your chops. There are plenty of small entry-level projects. This is valid on a resume and will make you confident that you can jump into a job and be functional.