This feature first appeared in the Winter 2022 issue of Certification Magazine. Click here to get your own print or digital copy.
You don’t have to have a certification to work in IT. And not every worker who has a certification is inarguably better equipped to do his or her job than folks with no professional credentials. Unless your job description is literally “Prepare the world for the eventual reign of a winged and clawed horror from ancient times with face tentacles and a lust for power” however — not likely, given the exceedingly low demand at technology firms for qualified Cthulhu worshippers — then you are going to need tech skills.
And there does seem to be broad agreement that certification can both teach and sharpen tech skills. A substantial 37 percent of all Salary Survey respondents report that they use skills “learned or enhanced through certification” several times a day at their current jobs. A further 51 percent rely on their certified skills either several times a week (35.9 percent) or several times a month (16.1 percent).
That leaves just 11 percent of respondents who reap a direct workplace benefit from certification only occasionally (8.9 percent) or rarely (2.1 percent).
The boon to certification holders isn’t strictly limited to IT skills entrenchment, either. A strong 70 percent of those surveyed either agree (41.9 percent) or strongly agree (27.9 percent) that getting certified has increased their ability to solve problems, while 66 percent either agree (38.3 percent) or strongly agree (27.2 percent) that getting certified has improved their workplace productivity.
Certification can also make you more attractive to potential employers. More than 76 percent of survey respondents either agree (40.8 percent) or strongly agree (35.7 percent) that they’ve experienced greater demand for their skills since becoming certified.
Certification can have a positive impact on salary, of course — you may have read about that somewhere. As indicated by the annual income figures given at the start of this section, IT is probably a pretty good place to be whether or not you have a list of credentials as long as your forearm. Even having just one certification, however, can make a big difference.
(Incidentally, some survey respondents do indeed have a list of credentials that might even exceed forearm length: 3.8 percent of those surveyed have 16 or more current IT certifications.)
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average weekly income for a U.S. “computer occupations” worker, per the most recent data, is $1,754. Among Salary Survey respondents who hold just one active certification, however, the comparable figure derived from our data for U.S. professionals is $1,963 — which adds up to $10,868 across an entire year. The comparison isn’t exact, but it does give a sense of the extent to which certification can add some clout to your earning power.
Whatever its impact on salary, certification isn’t only about short-term gains. More than 32 percent of those surveyed have been working in a job role that directly utilizes one or more of their certified skills for longer than 10 years. That kind of longevity suggests that earning and maintaining a certification can keep you moving forward in your career, perhaps indefinitely.
And while bias is certainly a factor, who better than certified IT professionals to look around at the IT certification landscape and assess its ongoing potential? There are naysayers among the total survey population who think that the overall worth and impact of IT certifications will either diminish (17.8 percent) or disappear (1.2 percent) over the next five years.
The vast majority of those surveyed, on the other hand, think the glass is half-full: 21.9 percent feel that worth and impact of certifications will remain the same over the next five years, while 51.9 percent predict that certifications will become more valuable and impactful. We like the positive outlook. As former First Lady Michelle Obama once said, “There is no magic to achievement. It’s really about hard work, choices, and persistence.”
TABLE TALK: Which certifications are on the to-do list of certified professionals?
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