certification?
I am a C++ developer who recently obtained the MCSD in Visual Basic. I am
looking for a VB position right now, because I realize that I need more experience
working with VB, COM, IIS, MTS etc. I have done some work in VB at my current
job and I have gotten good reviews on that work. The VB projects at work
have been good experience but they do not utilize most aspects of VB. What
concerns me is that I am getting the feeling from recruiters that they don't
feel I am qualified for VB development.
any suggestions on what I should do? Should I go after more certifications?
and if so, which?
[636 byte] By [
shawn] at [2007-11-9 17:53:41]

# 1 Re: certification?
Considering that I have VB and C++, I would say that the recruiters are more
interested in getting the most from you that they can. I don't know what
region you are in but I would guess that C++ developers make more than VB
guys and they aren't thrilled with the idea of getting less of a commission.
Sell your C++ skills while keeping in mind that you want to work in a place
that uses other dev languages. Concentrate on your C++ study on gaining COM
skills amoung the others. Keep trying for the VB stuff and tell them that
you use VB for the UI and C++ for the backend stuff. I don't see the need
for more certs but they don't hurt. Recruiters will push you towards
whatever is the highest commission for them and not that you are
unqualified. Use other recruiters, there are many.
John Cantley
"shawn" <sfultz@csc.com> wrote in message news:39f5cebf$1@news.dev-archive.com...
>
> I am a C++ developer who recently obtained the MCSD in Visual Basic. I am
> looking for a VB position right now, because I realize that I need more
experience
> working with VB, COM, IIS, MTS etc. I have done some work in VB at my
current
> job and I have gotten good reviews on that work. The VB projects at work
> have been good experience but they do not utilize most aspects of VB. What
> concerns me is that I am getting the feeling from recruiters that they
don't
> feel I am qualified for VB development.
>
> any suggestions on what I should do? Should I go after more
certifications?
> and if so, which?
# 2 Re: certification?
You don't need any more certification. Certification is not as important to
programmers/developers as they are to network/system professionals. You
should stick with C++, and use VB as a supplemental tool. Meanwhile, try
to learn C#. It is the new language that targets to C++ developers who need
the "ease of use" of VB. You can download the .NET SDK from Microsoft for
free.
Hope this helps.
simon.
"shawn" <sfultz@csc.com> wrote in message news:39f5cebf$1@news.dev-archive.com...
>
> I am a C++ developer who recently obtained the MCSD in Visual Basic. I am
> looking for a VB position right now, because I realize that I need more
experience
> working with VB, COM, IIS, MTS etc. I have done some work in VB at my
current
> job and I have gotten good reviews on that work. The VB projects at work
> have been good experience but they do not utilize most aspects of VB. What
> concerns me is that I am getting the feeling from recruiters that they
don't
> feel I am qualified for VB development.
>
> any suggestions on what I should do? Should I go after more
certifications?
> and if so, which?
simon at 2007-11-12 0:23:47 >
