If you’re considering a career in web design, find a course in Adobe Dreamweaver.
We’d also suggest that you learn all about the complete Adobe Web Creative Suite, including Flash and Action Script, in order to use Dreamweaver as a commercial web-designer. This knowledge can mean later becoming an Adobe Certified Expert (ACE) or Adobe Certified Professional (ACP).
Building a website is just the start of what’s needed – to maintain content, create traffic, and work with dynamic database-driven sites, you will have to learn more programming skills, namely ones like PHP, HTML, and MySQL. You should also gain a good understanding of E-Commerce and Search Engine Optimisation (SEO).
An all too common mistake that students everywhere can make is to choose a career based on a course, rather than starting with the end result they want to achieve. Universities have thousands of direction-less students that chose a program because it looked interesting – in place of something that could gain them the career they desired.
You could be training for only a year and end up doing the actual job for 10-20 years. Don’t make the error of taking what may be a very ‘interesting’ program only to waste your life away with something you don’t even enjoy!
It’s essential to keep your focus on where you want to go, and build your study action-plan from that – don’t do it the other way round. Keep your eyes on your goals and ensure that you’re training for an end-result that’ll reward you for many long and fruitful years.
Take guidance from a professional advisor, even if you have to pay – it’s considerably cheaper and safer to find out at the start if a chosen track will suit, rather than find out after 2 years that the job you’ve chosen is not for you and have to return to the start of another program.
We’d hazard a guess that you’re a practical sort of person – the ‘hands-on’ individual. If you’re like us, the trial of reading reference books and manuals is something you’ll force on yourself if you absolutely have to, but it’s not really your thing. Check out video-based multimedia instruction if book-based learning really isn’t your style.
Our ability to remember is increased when multiple senses are involved – learning experts have been saying this for years now.
Locate a program where you’ll receive a library of CD or DVD ROM’s – you’ll be learning from instructor videos and demo’s, and then have the opportunity to practice your skills in interactive lab’s.
Always insist on a training material demonstration from any training college. You’ll want to see expert-led demonstrations, slideshows and virtual practice lab’s for your new skills.
Some companies only have access to just online versions of their training packages; and while this is acceptable much of the time, imagine the problems if internet access is lost or you only get very a very slow connection sometimes. It is usually safer to have physical CD or DVD discs which removes the issue entirely.
It’s essential to have the very latest Microsoft (or any other key organisation’s) authorised exam preparation packages.
Sometimes people can get thrown by going through practice questions that aren’t from authorised sources. Often, the terminology in the real exams can be completely unlike un-authorised versions and it’s vital that you know this.
You should make sure you test how much you know by doing tests and practice exams prior to taking the real thing.
Can job security truly exist anywhere now? In a marketplace like the UK, with industry changing its mind whenever it suits, there doesn’t seem much chance.
Wherever we find increasing skills shortages mixed with growing demand however, we generally discover a newly emerging type of security in the marketplace; driven forward by a continual growth, organisations struggle to find the influx of staff needed.
The 2006 British e-Skills survey demonstrated that twenty six percent of all IT positions available are unfilled mainly due to an appallingly low number of trained staff. This shows that for each 4 job positions in existence around Information Technology (IT), we’ve only got three properly trained pro’s to perform that task.
This distressing notion underpins the validity and need for more commercially trained computer professionals across the country.
Undoubtedly, now, more than ever, really is a fabulous time to retrain into the IT industry.
(C) S. Edwards 2009. Visit This Site or dreamweavercs4training.co.uk.