Re: Advice sought on wearing CCIE on sleeve

From: P729 (p729@cox.net)
Date: Tue Sep 24 2002 - 21:21:06 GMT-3


Tom,

You should be proud of your accomplishment and be able to express it any way
you please. But often times a little tact and humility can go a long way.
Ease into it, be discreet. If the others "with more experience" still have a
problem with it, then it's just that--it's their problem. **** 'em.

Personally, I wish they would allow us to use just our initials and number
for personalization, kind of like a monogram and a little more understated.
Just me.

Best of luck,

Mas Kato
https://ecardfile.com/id/mkato
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tom Larus" <tlarus@cox.net>
To: <ccielab@groupstudy.com>
Sent: Tuesday, September 24, 2002 8:54 AM
Subject: OT: Advice sought on wearing CCIE on sleeve

I have been looking at items in the CCIE store, and I like the CCIE bomber
jacket. However, as a CCIE with less than the usual amount of paid
experience (I could fairly be called a "lab rat" CCIE), I am very sensitive
to offending folks with more experience who might resent a CCIE like me
"wearing it on his sleeve." I think they actually put your number on the
sleeve, so it is the classic case of wearing something on your sleeve.

On the other hand, wearing it while I am still in the job-hunting mode could
spark up conversations with people who might know of unadvertised positions.
You know how it is hard to go to Borders' computer book section without
meeting interesting IT folks.

I will be interviewing soon for a job with a Cisco Gold Partner. Do CCIEs
in resellers actually wear CCIE gear, or is is considered tacky and
pretentious? I don't want to buy something that it turns out is frowned on
or laughed at by folks directly involved with Cisco. If the CCIE store
goods are not of good quality, that would make the decision easier.

Anyone have any thoughts on this?

I know that this is the sort of question I would not need to ask if I had
lots of industry experience, but I am not in a position to go back and
relive my life differently right now.

Best regards,
Tom Larus



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