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Can someone recommend how to get started in developer certification? Which certs should i get first?

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9 Answers

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I've noticed that people that have certifications need them to demonstrate to others that they know a technology. People that really know the material don't need a certificate because their work and knowledge speaks for itself. When I'm interviewing people I'm always cautious of people that got a lot of certifications.

So, in my opinion, if you are really that good, don't bother.

I know I will be voted down for answering in this manner, but I don't care. I just want to let people know that not everyone has warm fuzzy feelings about Microsoft Certifications. Until the tests are made hard enough to actually mean something and they make it difficult to cheat, the program will have negative connotations.

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In your opinion, will having certifications hurt the people that really know the material? – Greg Jan 23 at 22:12
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Please check your prejudices at the door. "In my experience" does not constitute truth. – Randolpho Jan 25 at 16:16
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I also can't believe this was given as the accepted answer. I call shenanigans. – Randolpho Feb 26 at 14:54
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I still call shenanigans, but can people upvote this question to 10 so I can get a populist badge? – Randolpho May 27 at 19:02
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This answer is garbage. – Robert S. Aug 10 at 21:31
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Decide whether to aim for web, windows or enterprise development. There are specific certification paths for these areas. Once you decided it's straight forward, just pass exam by exam ;P Read the skills-being-measured, buy some study books and learn a few weeks or months for each exam.

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You have 3 areas of expertise for Visual Studio 2005:

  • Windows
  • Web
  • Enterprise

On each of these categories you have two levels of certification:

  • Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS)
  • Microsoft Certified Professional Developer (MCPD)

Select your programming language of choice.

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NOTE: Some of the links on this answer are no longer valid. Microsoft has apparently decided -- again -- to revamp its certification paths. I will compile a new cert page soon; when I do, I will update this page. Edited 10/15/2009

I built a page on the subject on our company's internal wiki. It's got lots of links for the latest MS Certs and a discussion of the paths you can take. My own personal goal is Certified Architect, but that's.... more of a pipe dream, really, 'cause I ain't got the cash or the time. A more attainable goal is Enterprise Application Developer, as it encompasses everything a good developer should know: web, desktop, data, and networking.

If you're just getting into the business of developing, start with an MCTS ASP.NET cert and work your way along. ASP.NET is the most likely technology you'll use in any MS shop.

And now, without further ado, the wiki page, slightly translated:

Cert Path

The items below have been organized to help you determine what courses to take to gain Microsoft Certification training. They include links to the official Microsoft page for each Cert. For more information:

Microsoft Certification

MCTS Classes @ New Horizons

MCPD Classes @ New Horizons

Microsoft Certification Tests @ Prometric

The certs are ranked according to prerequisite - every MCTS requires the Core Test and every MCPD requires at least one particular MCTS certification. If you have an MCA you are uber and pwn.

Core Test

Application Development Foundation -- 70-536

This is a core test required for all MCTS certifications.

Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist

(Visual Studio 2008; each bullet represents a separate MCTS certification)

  • Windows Presentation Foundation Applications 70-502 (requires 70-536)

  • MCTS: Windows Communication Foundation Applications 70-503 (requires 70-536)

  • MCTS: Windows Workflow Foundation Applications 70-504 (requires 70-536)

  • MCTS: Windows Forms Applications 70-505 (requires 70-536)

  • MCTS: ADO.NET Applications 70-561 (requires 70-536)

  • MCTS: ASP.NET Applications 70-562 (requires 70-536)

Microsoft Certified Professional Developer

(Visual Studio 2008; each bullet represents a separate MCPD certification)

  • MCPD: Windows Developer 3.5 70-563 (requires 70-505)

  • MCPD: ASP.NET Developer 3.5 70-564 (requires 70-536)

  • MCPD: Enterprise Application Developer 3.5 70-565 (requires 70-503, 70-505, 70-561, 70-562) (Not yet available; requires the WCF, WinForms, ADO.NET and ASP.NET MCTS certs)

Microsoft Certified Architect

The short description: it's like a very expensive mini-doctoral program. Requires an entrance exam, $25k, a 5 week trip to Redmond, 5 more exams, a jury trial, an arm, a leg, and a firstborn child. OUCH!

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When I got my Microsoft Certified Architect, they didn't take my firstborn child, just a pound of flesh. – Robert S. Aug 10 at 21:32
Wow, 5 week trip to Redmond sounds really cool. I wish I had 25k to spare. Will have to live with lowly MCPD for the time being. – Alexander Abramov Oct 15 at 16:00
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If you are planning Microsoft Certified Professional Developer (MCPD) You could start reading the official book of the test that you wanna make, I was preparing for the 70526 and I found this very helpful Check the official MCPD certification site

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The first editions of these books are not that good. Not all the material is covered, for example, and they contain some really big blatant errors in a way hat does not instill confidence in these books! – Dave Van den Eynde Apr 30 at 12:16
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See also this related question - what-are-the-best-resources-to-get-ms-developer-certification

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Don't forget the parnter benefits that come with certifications. If you are working for a company that needs a Gold Partner status - this might be worth discussing with the person that manages your partner status. Different certifications come with different benefits in many cases - the MCPD certs for example can get your company a large number of free VS 2008 Team Developer with MSDN licenses.

Another thing to think about is how you go about getting the certification. Make sure that you know the subject, and are not just cramming for a test. Don't cheat - there are test answers out there, but stay away from them. If you take pride in what you're learning and what you already know, in the end, your certification will be more valuable to you, your employer, and potential future employers.

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The problem with these certs is that it's so easy to find the exams online. You can't trust that anyone really knows the MS stuff (outside of the Microsoft Certified Architect stuff) because you don't know who legitimately passed the material and who cheated their way through.

I think it's a good foundation to have (if you take the time to actually learn the material), but if I were a company, I wouldn't count on the cert meaning anything.

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Many of the so called exams online are not always in many cases the same as the exam. I fell for this early on in my career and it cost me $180 bucks each time because I relied on the cheat tests. They only way to pass is to know your stuff. Don't rely on practice tests; they will let you down. You must learn the material, after all its about aquiring knowledge, not a piece of paper.

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