ITIL V5 CERTIFICATION, IS IT WORTH?
Posted by BillyCostigan_JR@reddit | sysadmin | View on Reddit | 13 comments
Hi guys,
Recently my company offered us an official certificate for ITILV5, prize is around 880 €.
The thing is that i need to sign some kind of arrangement to stay at the company for at least two years.
If i leave before that time (ex. 12 months) i have to pay 50% of its prize and so on.
Is this ITIL CERTIFICATION good for my future? It may open some new horizons?
I work as a service desk/system administrator/L2 providing services for a public company in my country.
Kind regards,
endlesstickets@reddit
Not worth for ITIL. For a company it makes sense to educate people on the value of and following a process. For you, find a traning and get the voucher (you need a trainer to get the voucher).
pheellprice@reddit
Do the course, figure out a new role being good enough so that 400€ is easily ignored.
I’m not sure ITIL will help you get a new job though. Training is training.
TrippTrappTrinn@reddit
Our company allegedly use ITIL, but as a sysadmin I have never had to relate to it. It is used by management, so our processes are influenced by it. Too many years ago we were trained in ITIL (I think the course was called ITIL foundation), but never actually used it.
Still nice to know what it is, so if the company pays, and you have no plans to leave, why not?
Anthropic_Principles@reddit
Fairly safe to say that if it's not impacting your work, then mgmt isn't using it either.
SAugsburger@reddit
I think many orgs claim to use parts of ITIL framework, but use what they find practical and ignore things they don't.
tankerkiller125real@reddit
It's a framework, so that's the correct way to do it.
jaffajake@reddit
That's literally how you should use the ITIL framework.
phil-99@reddit
2 years commitment for under £1k cost is pathetic.
I understand management’s desire to not “waste” money on training but FFS not training people who stay is worse than training people who leave.
2_Spicy_2_Impeach@reddit
What color is your Six Sigma belt? /s
If you think you’re going to stay for two more years or don’t mind paying it back, I’d say go for it. Something to toss on the resume for the AI enhanced searches by recruiters.
I don’t think it’s going to suddenly unlock any doors when the ink is drying but just expand horizons.
itperson1111@reddit
I think its a good idea. Plus, if its within the two years and you find a new opportunity, odds are you'll get a bigger salary and that amount you have to pay back is very quickly recouped.
Muffin_Shreds@reddit
It may be worth it if you’re still early in your career or have leadership aspirations. I would explore testing on your own and not being locked into an employment contract over ITIL.
UpperAd5715@reddit
ITIL will be nice mainly if you go into management or teamlead functions, otherwise its just a resume padder that's honestly too well liked by some larger corporations for the benefit it gives someone in a technical rle.
Public companies tend to value ITIL as a resume padder, it's a bore of a cert though but pretty common sense-y
Makere-b@reddit
I don't think it's worth for you personally unless you're actively looking for a new job or are interested in ITIL.
Do you get a raise or something if you get the certificate?
However, the company might not like you not accepting the arrangement, it would look like you're planning to leave within 2 years.