Thanks for sharing. I have been in IT for a while. Most recently network administration. REally want to work remotely. Studying azure fundamentals then maybe azure networking on solutions architect.
Do you think the cloud market momentum is available to work remotely in other places? Or is it more strictly local for big companies? This question of mine reflects my position in Brazil, I'm starting as an intern in a cloud company, but my goal in the future is to work for companies abroad to raise money (I'm half Italian so I have a permit to work in Europe)
im looking to get into sol architecture and I was wondering if ifts possible to work from another country full time remote. for example, would you be able to live in asia in your current job or do you know anyone that's done similar? Thanks!!
Hi mate. I graduated uni couple months ago. While I been looking for a job, I passed the AZ-900 and now moving onto the AZ-104. Any idea's of the name of entry level cloud positions I should be looking for? Graduate Job searching can be hard. Thanks
Thanks for the awesome vid. I am currently working as a level 2 Support Engineer in London for an msp working from home. I've currently passed my az-104 a week ago and am looking to get the az-305 within the next 6months. Would you say any other Azure associate exams are worth it , or is the az-305 the Crown Jewl to go for ?
Thanks Jay! I certainly think going after the AZ-305 is worth it along with the AZ-104 it provides a really good insight to the platform as a whole. I personally see value in the associate exams too as they provide more granular information on certain topics. My tactic was 104, 305 and then to look at more associate exams in areas I see future value. Hope that helps 😊
Thank you for this video. I am in community college for IT and am currently studying for AWS cloud practitioner. Someday I aspire to do something similar to what you do!
Hey Ally, I didn’t actually go to university, I worked straight from school (a couple of years doing unrelated jobs) and then started in IT Support, moved to field engineering and then focussed mainly on infrastructure projects. I worked for small service providers & then had my own business for a while so it was really varied which helps as being an SA requires quite a lot of commercial acumen. Hope this helps!