I commend people to remember the tale of the Emperor's New Clothes here.

It utterly confounds me that people are focusing on the CCIE number 
as the discriminator for a hiring decision, "lower being better."

Lower means that one obtained the certification earlier.  Presumably, 
since the number was obtained, the individual has been working.  This 
can mean that the lower-numbered candidate can present a solid track 
record of CCIE-level work experience to an employer, while the 
higher-numbered candidate simply may not have the experience.

I've never regarded certification, in any field, as more than an 
entry point.  Let's put it this way -- when I had to have open-heart 
surgery, I could have chosen among several board-certified surgeons. 
The most important factors, however, were how many procedures they 
had done, and, even more importantly, how frequently they do them. 
Surgical statistics show, without question, that "part-time" cardiac 
surgeons and their teams do not have the good results of someone that 
does such procedures constantly.




Message Posted at:
http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=70307&t=70151
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