Back to Basics
        So forget about your MCSE already!
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- April 01, 2001
OK, so I was wrong in my last column about how 
        Microsoft would treat certification for the Whistler 
        line. It won’t be seeding questions into existing 
        exams — it’ll be seeding entire exams into the 
        MCSE track. (If you haven’t heard the few details 
        available, make sure to read “News” 
        this month.) 
      
      
That said, I’d like to take up the cause of the 
        lowly MCP title. At our recent MCP TechMentor 
        technical conference in Florida, when I asked 
        the more than 850 attendees how many of them had 
        tackled any Windows 2000 exam (pass or fail), 
        about 50 people stood up. And when I asked how 
        many of those had achieved their entire Windows 
        2000 MCSE? I could count them on just a few fingers. 
      
      Yikes. If that doesn’t send a shiver down the 
        spines of Microsoft’s marketing folks, I don’t 
        know what would. After all, any vendor’s certification 
        program exists indirectly as a way for a company 
        to extend the reach of its sales force. MCPs act 
        as an army of technical experts to push Microsoft 
        technology. Without your influence and day-to-day 
        support efforts, who will deploy and administer 
        Win2K? 
      A couple of nights later, over dinner, one of 
        our magazine contributors said something that 
        dumbfounded me: “People who get their Windows 
        2000 MCP really have something to be proud of.” 
      
      I thought I had misheard. “MCP?” 
      “MCP.” 
      Granted, as the editor of MCP Magazine, I’m surrounded 
        by over-achievers — people who write books, teach, 
        and consult, and who consider it essential to 
        learn the software and earn new certifications 
        as quickly as possible. 
      So it’s been a long time since I saw real ongoing 
        value in the MCP — a certification you get by 
        passing a single test. Where’s the challenge in 
        that?! 
      Time to take a new picture. 
      Consider giving up the idea of having your MCSE 
        before the end of the year. Let go of the assumption 
        that you’re obliged to maintain a continuum in 
        your MCSE standing. Not having it for a while 
        probably puts you at very little risk on the job 
        or in your personal life — unless you’re the sole 
        MCSE support for a solution provider that needs 
        your title to maintain its partner standing with 
        Microsoft. 
      Make the time in your schedule to study and work 
        with the software. Then worry about the certification. 
      
      Consider a new kind of goal: “I will achieve 
        my Windows 2000 MCP before the end of this year.” 
        Just one exam. 
      Could becoming a Windows 2000 MCP have meaning 
        for you? Tell me at [email protected].
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian L. Schaffhauser is a freelance writer based in Northern California.