Ask HN: Are AWS Certs worth getting for experienced Devs?

I worked for big tech out of undergrad (mostly frontend/mobile for a few years) moved on to work at a few startups where I naturally switched to do more backend/cloud infrastructure work. I never got a 'formal' education in terms of masters or any kind of certs. Would it be worth it for me to start getting some Certs (like AWS solutions architect - associate/professional) if I want to switch my career towards more solutions design/consultation? I don't know many people personally that went this path. I guess I'm looking to work for reputable agencies or consultancies and get assigned to different clients/projects instead of the usual big tech route of IC for a particular team of a particular company until that company decides to reorg you to another team.

Obviously not all Certs have the same value. I think AWS Solutions Architect - Associate would be the most adjacent 'bridge' for me, is there any other ones that I should be seriously considering? Seems like theres a new one every week nowadays with AI (which I've dabbled with before in some prior projects but nothing deep or extensive).

10 points | by Gold-Ask-lx 1 day ago

12 comments

  • Cyfrit 7 hours ago
    I actually got a free exam attempt once (I've forgotten which cert it was now), but because their proctoring software didn't work, I eventually just couldn't be bothered to take it lol. As for this, it really depends on your clients. These certificates are for laypeople to look at—kind of like how only non-native English speakers need to take the TOEFL.
  • fsuts 4 hours ago
    I would recommend certificates, they make you cover the whole subject in the round rather than just what you use in your job.

    I have a friend who is an It architect and he also did one called TOGAF and said it was worth doing

    https://www.opengroup.org/togaf

    • Gold-Ask-lx 2 hours ago
      Yeah one thing I noticed while going through some of the material is how often I learned details about certain tech that I would have never had reason to come across working for big tech or startups. s3 duplication and different storage classes across multiple regions for example. I've obviously heard about and know the general concept of these things during scalability discussions and meetings and what not but there was never a technical or business reason for me to get familiar with it myself. It was always an abstract concept that was either handled in a proprietary way by another team in another building somewhere or something we only had to worry about if we 100x our user base and need to start expanding internationally after funding round xyz.
  • gokuljs 1 day ago
    I really don't understand the point of doing this certificates seriously for what joy. i literally figured out lot of things through chatgpt deployed and scalled services. I am like its that easy. you just have practice it few times thats it.
    • Gold-Ask-lx 21 hours ago
      lol none of this is for "joy", I'm trying to figure out if having these certs will help me get more interviews/work
      • gokuljs 12 hours ago
        This is 2021 approch dude. No one really gives a fuck about certficates. world has changed a lot. i think you need to catch up.
        • cliglot 7 hours ago
          > i think you need to catch up

          Likely futile though. The way to get jobs now is through network and connections. If OP doesn’t have those already, it’s unlikely they’ll be able to “catch up” in a reasonable amount of time.

          • gokuljs 5 hours ago
            I do get lot of job request inbound through email and linkedin telling we are hiring and do you want to join.
  • brand_edge 6 hours ago
    I believe at your stage, your experience has more leverage than any other certificate. Hiring managers don't see the certificates. They just skimmed it. They see what kind of work you have done.

    I can say that because I had been a hiring manager in tech for seven plus years. What I am looking for is this person who can do the work that we want, and the proof that you have of working with startups is bigger than any other certificate.

    • Gold-Ask-lx 2 hours ago
      I know for big tech and startups no one cares about certificates and if I wanted to continue that path I wouldn't have made this post. but would you say having an additional small personal project on github would make the resume stand out more for agencies/consultancies? obviously having yet another multi-year significant role at Google/Amazon would be by far the best addition to the resume but clearly that's not an addition i can easily add
  • giantg2 10 hours ago
    I think they are worth getting. It's something a resume scanner might be looking for. I think that most AWS contracts cut the business a discount if a certain percentage of their IT team have an AWS cert.
  • brand_edge 6 hours ago
    Have more leverage with your work that you have done in the startups.

    Hiring managers are more looking at what kind of impact you can provide and what kind of work you can get done. A certificate is useful when you don't have experience.

    I would say that go and apply. You will learn while applying.

  • ensemblehq 23 hours ago
    AWS Certifications do help to a certain extent to convey your knowledge of the AWS ecosystem to consultancies and their clients. I don't have a certification but almost all of the consultancies I've worked with advocate for it just to give the client more confidence. Mind you these are the larger consultancies with larger clients so they tend to like these certifications as a signal. Have you ever had a chance to work with the various components in the ecosystem already?
    • Gold-Ask-lx 21 hours ago
      yep, i had to use the usual s3 + ec2/ecs + cloudwatch + various databases/message queues for quite a few different startups i was part of. learned all of it on the job.

      i guess my question is more along the lines of "if I have these certs on my resume, is it going to pass through a lot more filters nowadays"

  • whs 15 hours ago
    I had one.

    The only two reasons it was worth it is my company paid for it, and you can get a lounge space and some swag at reinvent. I never get to use it professionally

  • botten 1 day ago
    No.
  • SuperLede 7 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • tallyassistant 12 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • rezvovmobile 1 day ago
    [flagged]