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Cisco social network targets skills shortage

Cisco social network targets skills shortage

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 23 Jun 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The networking giant kicked off its annual conference in Orlando with two announcements focused on reversing the heavily publicized IT skills shortage trend. It has also expanded its CCNA certification program

ORLANDO - Cisco Systems Inc. has launched two new initiatives – including a social networking site – aimed at providing a much needed boost to the IT talent and skills shortage. But according to recent computer science and technology enrollment figures in Canada, the root of the problem still lies in the lack of IT interest among young people.

The Cisco Learning Network site was unveiled at the company’s annual Cisco Live! conference in Orlando. The Web 2.0-based community aims to allow new and existing IT professionals the ability to collaborate and learn from each other through discussion forums, document sharing, wikis and blog posts. Discussions could range anywhere from beginner tips on the benefits of Cisco’s CCNA certification to advanced tutorials for users looking to tackle advanced firewall security configurations.

“This social learning site is the first of its type and will allow the world to be able to leverage and understand all the products and services we provide,” Jeanne Beliveau-Dunn, general manager of Learning@Cisco, told a group of international journalists at the conference.

“The best education comes not just from the content, but also the experiences you get on the job. Sharing and discussing examples and best practices can better help technical professionals learn from each other.”

The eventual goal of the community, according to Cisco, is to become a self-supporting network for customers, partners and students to shares ideas about networking and IT. The site looks to be an extension of the company’s Cisco Networking Academy, a global e-learning program that gives students the opportunity to pursue IT-related courses through online training and hands-on workshops.

In addition to the new social networking site, the company also unveiled security, voice, and wireless specialist certifications as part of its CCNA program. Cisco said the certifications address the new landscape of today’s networks – where IT professionals have to run an infrastructure that deals with technologies like VoIP, IP video and Web 2.0 tools. Forrester Research Inc. analyst Rob Whiteley, who had recently conducted a survey on the networking skills requirements, said that most large enterprises can expect to have dedicated wireless, voice and security specialists within the next five years.

“In IT, what used to be the domain of the expert level is actually becoming the requirement of the entry-level,” Whitely, principal analyst and research director at Forrester Consulting, said. “Today’s IT managers are faced with a daunting task to invest in a lot of new skills and the network is something that keeps coming up.” And with more than 80 per cent of Cisco’s business going through the channel community, the company said the new initiatives will also be attractive to partners.

“Security, wireless and voice areas are doubling over the next five years,” Alex Thurber, senior director of technology go-to-market strategy for worldwide channels at Cisco, said. “So if the customers need that, the partners do too because they are supplying the technology.” Thurber said that he’s working closely with the Cisco Networking Academy and wants to see its students leave with certifications and promising careers. With this demand for specialized skills has also come a highly publicized IT skills shortage. At a panel discussion at its Toronto headquarters last October,


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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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