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Introduction
Do you have any of the Cisco Partner specialization
certifications? Or if you use resellers or consultants to perform work
relating to your network, do they have them? Cisco recently announced that its Channel Partners are going
to be required to recertify with a new set of specializations. These
will be phased in so that all partners are on the new scheme by March
2008 at the latest. Why do you care? If you are a Channel Partner, your sales and
technical teams are going to
have to work through recertifying under the new
specializations, when your old ones expire (or sooner). If you are a Customer, you might want to know what to look for in your Cisco networking resellers or consultants. The new Channel specializations also tell us something about shifts in the market as Cisco sees it. Read on for my impressions on this, below.
Chesapeake Netcraftsmen is a Cisco Premier Partner. I was
asked to work with my fellow team leads to plan and coordinate how we
migrate
to the new certifications. We are trying to do this as quickly as
possible. If I were in marketing, I'd say that we wanted to
ensure that we bring the best and latest knowledge to our
consulting work. Since I'm technical (or would like to think so), I'm
not allowed to say things like that. So while that is true, I'll
acknowledge that the reality is that we have to fit
the training, study, and testing in around existing customer
work, just like everyone else. Now you can probably guess one of my motivations in writing
this article
-- I've already done some of the work! In addition, my occasional co-author Carole Warner Reece and I
both worked as SME's (Subject Matter Experts) with ElementK in
developing the SE (Sales Engineer) and FE (Field Engineer) versions
of the new Cisco Foundations Express course for Cisco. These courses
are the basic new Channel Partner certification courses supporting the
new channel
specializations. Partners meeting some other requirements must have
staff certified on Foundations Express (or one other specialization
area) to qualify as Premier partners. Of course, some Premier Partners
may hold several more specializations, as Chesapeake Netcraftsmen does.
Timing of the New Cisco Channel Partner SpecializationsSome specifics extracted from the Cisco announcement:
Note that Partners whose specializations expire after June 14, 2006 will have to re-certify under the new specializations. Disclaimer: I've done my best to verify the information in this article. Having said that, there has recently been some changes in the relevant Cisco web pages. As always, I may also have missed something -- so it is up to you to make sure you are spending your study and testing time in accord with the latest Cisco requirements.Impact of the New CertificationsEverybody needs to be aware of the new specialization scheme
because the
training and
certification world has become somewhat split. There are now some
courses intended only for resellers/consultants, and not for Cisco
customers. In more specialized areas, the courses remain the same, and
my expectation is that they will continue to do so, just due to the
economics. It is quite expensive to develop a new course as polished as
those Cisco puts out. One very Big Deal is the push behind the Cisco
ISR (Integrated Services Router). These routers provide
increased performance (CPU and memory), and serve as the follow-on
products for the popular 800, 1700, 2600, and 3600 families of routers.
The ISRs include the later 800 series routers, and the 1800, 2800, and
3800 series of routers. They're the hottest-selling router yet
for Cisco, so they've apparently done something Quite Right. What I haven't heard as much comment on (concerning the ISR's)
is the fact that you can put various other forms of hardware into the
modular members of this set of routers, including:
Foundations ExpressThe Foundations Express courses (SE, FE) reflect the above
capabilities. The SE course attempts to cover the various ways you can
use the ISR routers and components. The FE course does that and also
focuses on using SDM to configure ISRs. They both require ICND and the
CCNA certification as pre-requisite. They incorporate parts of the
Customer BCMSN and BSCI courses, among other sources of "re-purposed
content". Somewhere between developing the outline and filling in
content for these courses, the implications dawned on me. I think up to
that point our focus was more on skills needed to deploy ISR's. But
really, the Cisco world is changing... The following are my
perceptions, definitely not any sort of restatement of something from
Cisco: The insight here is that
Wireless is really becoming what I would call "infrastructural" --
everybody needs to do it. The same applies to the basics of Security.
Everybody needs to know some firewalling, some IPsec VPN. These are
becoming so ubiquitous in networks that you can't get by with hollering
for "the security person" or "the wireless person" to finish that part
of things. No longer is it a good idea to say "I'm a route-switch
person who doesn't need to know wireless". Worse, if you defined
"security specialist" as firewall plus IPsec VPN configuration, you
need to enlarge your focus. There's a lot more to security these days! The other novelty is that
Foundations Express (for FE's) focuses on configuration, mostly using
the Graphical User Interface in SDM. There is also some coverage of the
PIX/ASA software tool, ASDM. These tools work rather well, and
genuinely make configuration easier, especially the firewall and VPN
aspects. I did find myself dropping into the CLI to configure basic
AAA, also interfaces and especially subinterfaces. I'm not saying you
don't need to know the Cisco IOS CLI. I am indeed saying that
knowing Cisco CLI is removed or greatly reduced as a barrier to
new entrants, because SDM eases your way into working with Cisco
products.
By the way, many thanks to the large group of people at
ElementK who absorbed our constant and voluminous feedback and did the
PowerPoint and online training course development, to
a very tight timeline. Some Cisco partners will have access to the web
version of the training (which can be downloaded and studied offline as
well), via the Partner E-Learning Connection (PEC). Others may
encounter the PowerPoint version of the course through a Cisco Learning
Partner. Enjoy! The Other New SpecializationsLet's take a brief look at the other new "Base Specializations". Partners can add more specialization and achieve "Master" status, but let's not get into that amount of detail. Express FoundationBrief description: This specialization is the base for the new SE's and FE's. It includes what I'd describe as some of intermediate routing and switching (about half what's needed for CCNP prep), plus security (emphasis on firewalling, IOS IPS, NAT, IPsec VPN), and wireless (both the autonomous and lightweight approaches, with light coverage of outdoor WLAN but not mesh wireless).Short version of requirements: Pre-requisite CCDA or CCNA
(depending on role), which implies having the ICND course and exam,
also DESGN (for CCDA), and the relevant Foundations Express and
Lifecycle courses and exams. Advanced Routing & SwitchingBrief description: Routing and Switching, only more! The
courses include BGP, QoS, and MPLS, as well as High Availability and
IPv6. Short version of requirements: The SE role starts with CCDA,
QoS, and BSCI as pre-requisites. It adds the Advanced R&S and
Lifecycle courses and exams. The FE role has CCNP (implying BSCI) and
QoS as pre-requisites. It adds the Advanced FE R&S and Lifecycle
courses and exams. The partner also
has to have a CCIE on staff for this specialization. That makes
this a pretty solid specialization. It's going to take some prior
expertise and commitment to training and testing for a partner to
achieve this. Advanced SecurityBrief description: For FE's, start with CCSP and add NAC, ACS,
NAC on routers, NAC agents, CCA and CANAC Manager, MARS, MARS
reporting, configuring security devices, detecting malicious activity.
SE's need to know how to design for these platforms. Short version of requirements: The SE builds on CCDA with the Security Solutions and Design Specialist and Security Lifecycle courses and tests. The FE starts with CCSP or CCIE (Security), and adds Advanced Security Field Specialist and Security Lifecycle courses and test. The FE pre-requisites require a long list of courses and makes this a rather solid specialization as well. It's going to take some prior expertise and commitment to training and testing for a partner to achieve this. Advanced Wireless LANBrief description: The SE and FE need Cisco WLAN Fundamentals
(CWLF), then Cisco WLAN Advanced Topics (CWLAT). The first of these
covers basics of site survey and WLAN device setup. The CWLAT course
outline follows:
Short version of requirements: CCDA or CCNA, the above
courses, Wireless Lifecycle course. Express Unified CommunicationsBrief description: Partners cannot hold both this
specialization and the Advanced Unified Communications, below. I
presume that is because Advanced encompasses the Express content, and
then some. Express is directed at resellers working with Call Manager
Express / Unity Express. Short version of requirements: CCDA for SE, CCNA for FE,
then the IP Telephony Express and Lifecycle Services courses and exams.
Advanced Unified CommunicationsBrief description: Partners apparently need this to sell the
full range of Cisco IP Telephony gear. It requires sales and project
management expertise with Call Manager and Unity deployments, as well
as targetted skillsets. Short version of requirements: The SE role requires the IP
Telephony Design certification, QoS and Advanced IP Communications
Lifecycle courses and tests. The FE role is rather challenging,
requiring CCVP in effect, the CVOICE, QoS, IPT Troubleshooting, IP
Telephony, Gateway/Gatekeeper, plus Lifecycle course and exams, and the
MeetingPlace course. Some other roles are required: Unity Design and
Support, and a RichMedia certification. IPCC Express and IP Interactive
Voice Response (IVR) is another required role. I've been quietly not
mentioning the Account Manager roles. Advanced Unified Communications
requires two AM's with IP Communications and Lifecycle skills (courses
and exams), plus Lifecycle course and exam. Oh, and the Meetingplace
course. We've had this requirement covered and have been doing IPT
designs and installs. I'll note in passing that what we've seen
confirms that an effective project manager was a good call on Cisco's
part. There are a lot of moving parts to an IPT deployment, and it
definitely takes a dedicated person with good communication skills to
drive the project forward to a timely completion. Even when you take
this into account, there are a lot of details to be taken care of!
Gold, Silver, Premier PartnerCisco Gold, Silver, and Premier Partners have done a lot of certification and specialization work and met other requirements (including very satisfied customers), in order to obtain those Partner status levels. We've been a Premier partner for a few years now, and it does take a commitment to maintain that status. We've invested a fair amount in internal lab equipment to support internal training, testing labs, and customer demos. We in fact hold many more specializations than Premier requires, partly to answer the inevitable question "who is Chesapeake Netcraftsmen?"Detailed requirements can be found under the links off of the
following URL: http://www.cisco.com/web/partners/pr11/pr8/partners_pgm_category_page.html.
(See Gold, Silver, Premier to the left of the page). SummaryI hope this information has been useful and at least somewhat interesting. Yeah, it's perhaps a bit dry as reading, and not even really very technical. Variety is good!Here are some links where you can read more about some of what was discussed above. Please note: if you go
to the following Role Requirement links, you can easily shift topics in
the left web frame to view the overall description and other
information about each new specialization. So I have omitted links to
all that information -- too much unnecessary detail.
Your comments, questions, and suggestions for future articles are of course welcome! See below to decipher Pete's email address.
Dr. Peter J. Welcher (CCIE #1773, CCSI #94014, CCIP) is a
Senior Consultant with Chesapeake NetCraftsmen. NetCraftsmen is a
high-end consulting firm and Cisco Premier
Partner with multiple specializations, dedicated to quality
consulting and knowledge transfer. NetCraftsmen has eight CCIE's, with
expertise including large network high-availability routing/switching
and design, VoIP, QoS, MPLS, IPSec VPN, wireless LAN and
bridging, network management, security, IP multicast, and other
areas. See
http://www.netcraftsmen.net for more information about
NetCraftsmen. Pete's links start at
http://www.netcraftsmen.net/welcher . New articles will be posted
under the Articles link. Questions, suggestions for articles, etc. can
be sent to pjw
<at> netcraftsmen <dot> net (formatted this
way to fool email harvesting software).
4/5/2006 |
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