🖥 New IT Career in under 3 Months with my Hands-On Course 🖥 joshmadakor.tech/it
@tcorana5 ай бұрын
Finally a guy who is not scared to talk about his salary…
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Haha thank you
@mamneo24 ай бұрын
Incroyable.
@maxdemontbron97204 ай бұрын
Amen
@therealist20004 ай бұрын
I’m very confused when people don’t state it, are we going to take it away from you or something? 😂
@shorts264 ай бұрын
@therealist2000 some people like to eliminate as much competition as possible sad to say
@wizzleteets68295 ай бұрын
Working with Marines: "Ultra confident, mean, dont actually know what theyre doing" Yep. That checks out.
@SpoonHurler4 ай бұрын
I'm trackin' ya... we trackin' 😂
@2n1b524 күн бұрын
A shared experience.
@ariasabe5 ай бұрын
I could be wrong, but Josh is the first KZbinr who’s open and honest about salaries.
@mamneo24 ай бұрын
Incroyable.
@buenogoodlive4 ай бұрын
Not sure about that IT Specialist job, that pay seems high for that role.
@ariasabe4 ай бұрын
@@buenogoodlive it all depends on the state. MA has higher salaries than IN
@getgudcyber9244 ай бұрын
@@buenogoodlive Also depends on what the job req entails. Some IT specialist roles do sys admin work and some, some are basically just glorified helpdesk.
@banannadb22135 ай бұрын
Time clearly has the strongest correlation to your salaries (wink wink, that's the hard truth for some people). I wish you would have discussed how many years you've been working. No one just getting into cybersecurity will be a "senior" anything, no matter what degree certs etc you might have. There are very specific ways to bypass this ladder and make a lot of money in this field FAST, such as the security clearance, changing jobs often, having good contacts, starting your own business, and more I'm probably not thinking of.
@pineappleenjoyer92973 ай бұрын
Having incredibly hard certs at a young age will allow you to skip most of the ladder especially if the CEO has trust in you.
@frxnsirq4822 ай бұрын
@@pineappleenjoyer9297Which certs are you talking about? I want to know because I plan to do exactly that
@AVERUNS2 ай бұрын
@@frxnsirq482yes which certs ?
@aun062 ай бұрын
Which certs?@@pineappleenjoyer9297
@vasilemarin5242Ай бұрын
@@frxnsirq482 did you find some exemples ?
@DjMonak5 ай бұрын
I have been an IT specialist for over 20 years. However, the level of stress depends on many factors. Because of the few resources I had, incompetent managers and because we were always understaffed, I had a bad nervous breakdown a few years ago. I'm just saying that one morning I passed out at work and woke up inside an ambulance. A couple of years ago I changed my life. Less money, but my health certainly gained.
@techguy17183 ай бұрын
Hope you are feeling better.
@VisionryVibes3 ай бұрын
Sorry for the health buddy... But idm what role have you moved ??
@looksmatteronly3 ай бұрын
You need a psychiatrist dude. Imagine passing out for a job lmao could never be me
@smoke07832 ай бұрын
@@looksmatteronly people handle stress differently man. bro got to his breaking point cuz of shit in his environment. it happens to a lot of people lmao
@ultimatearc45382 ай бұрын
@@looksmatteronlyyou must be trolling by the looks of your username
@raygomez39355 ай бұрын
Now this is a cybersecurity youtube video. Great job! Thank you.
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it! 😍
@higuy4735 ай бұрын
holy cow. 160k subs!?! I have been following you since less than 10k! congrats on all your success Josh!
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!!❤️🔥 We doing our best out here, haha
@shkhamd5 ай бұрын
Stress are highest in positions where you have to delegate work to other people but you don't carry much authority. You basically at the front if the barrel when other people fucks up. Both in positions where you produce work by working heads down or you are a major decision maker authority, stresses are quite low.
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Truer words have never been spoken lol
@Technie8728 күн бұрын
What would the decision maker authority be different than the delegate work to other people be?
@virtualogic25 күн бұрын
@@Technie87 Try asking ChatGPT
@dtruth59885 ай бұрын
I agree about the cybersecurity jobs in that once you’ve been doing it for a while it’s not really that hard. In my experience it’s always the people who make it stressful. Especially on Government contracts. Most government leads are incompetent A-holes.
@Ricocase5 ай бұрын
what;s a while (hours)?
@jjamesmartiin5 ай бұрын
@@Ricocase something around 5k hours, in my experience
@adambickford87205 ай бұрын
@@Ricocase if you are measuring in hours, you are going to be disappointed
@gregharn14 ай бұрын
This times 1000, but some civilians are just as bad. Had the misfortune of working for a company that somehow the cybersec lead got permission for a bottomless budget. It was so frustrating that they'd buy & implement all these tools at the same time w/o fully training people AND, arguably more important, tailoring them to the company's needs.
@sjames8314 ай бұрын
Agree lol. I work in cybersecurity for government contracts. Been doing it for awhile, so the day to day stuff is pretty easy to me. It's definitely the people who make the shit difficult for no reason lol.
@DakotaHoll5 ай бұрын
180,000 "Ya know when your pay is kinda high" SIR
@49erman24 ай бұрын
Low compared to other fields or professions
@getgudcyber9244 ай бұрын
@@49erman2Lol what
@YoutubeYoutubehgtyujn4 ай бұрын
Not high compared to some other people I met making over $300,000, which is mind-boggling.
@dieglhix4 ай бұрын
@plumbingphase compared to what, brain surgeon? more risk involved
@atroxiv4 ай бұрын
@@dieglhix Senior engineering positions, management, etc.
@eatbreakfasts79935 ай бұрын
Nice breakdown. I feel like I would have never been able to ace an interview if it weren't for your homelab Active Directory tutorial, thanks again!
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Thank you, and good job!!!
@evans_northwest5 ай бұрын
"It's annoying because people don't cooperate." I don't think any truer words have been said about GRC.
@TheSoulCrisis5 ай бұрын
I experienced this very thing when I was working in my fintech company previously....I was doing a bunch of IT support stuff I didn't want to be involved in with a WAF project and freakin' engineering teams were a nightmare to collaborate with for certain key infrastructure changes being put into place. So glad I got out of there.....doing a 100% software developer role for a defense contractor now.
@Koszification5 ай бұрын
Support job = most stressful and difficult. Totaly agree. 💯 In most cases, it's a low paying, stressful job where you are not valued that much by the company, but you are in first contact with the custoner, and you're expected to come up with answers similar to what a Solutions Engineer (salary of $120k +) does while doing it in a "timely manner" to avoid SLA breach. I've been preeching this for years that if you end up in a support role in IT, your #1 priority should be to do whatever it takes to get off of that job. 🙏 I sure as hell know that the grass has been much greener ever since I moved on from tech support.
@MC_Myuki2 ай бұрын
I'm currently in the process of finishing certification mainly the security+ I already have the Google support cert. What job would u say I should try to get in as I'm interested in cybersecurity. What's ur advice ?
@leonardorodriguez6909 күн бұрын
@@MC_Myukiany update about on your progress?
@0xC47P1C35 ай бұрын
So cybersecurity analyst is the best all around. High pay and relatively low stress
@TerikaSaidIt5 ай бұрын
Unless there’s a BREACH. Then you’ll be stressed
@Zuriki095 ай бұрын
@@TerikaSaidIt depends if it's my data or not lol
@ElSanto00445 ай бұрын
I'd like to go that way, cybersecurity hold my beer
@HotNitrogen3 ай бұрын
Depends on who you work for too. I've seen many people work in a SOC that's contracted out and get burned out quick because they never employ enough people for the mountain of alerts they get. Then they have to hit a certain amount of tickets in x timeframe
@michaelriga64315 ай бұрын
I agree with Josh. When I worked on Department of Defense (DoD) projects in San Diego, the work was high-value and the salary was good, although not overly challenging. However, there was a lot of stress because I had to be on call in case something happened, even if it meant coming in at 2 AM. I didn't mind it earlier in my career, but I wouldn't do it now. Many cyber security (CS) and information technology (IT) jobs these days are just boring.
@scotthearts96345 ай бұрын
Really? Boring? 😢😭
@buenogoodlive4 ай бұрын
Every IT job is on-call.
@o0cscore0o4 ай бұрын
Yeah working on call shifts suck if you aren’t paid to take the call and overtime.
@MultiLightDark4 күн бұрын
How long have you been in the field?
@Liftheavy855 ай бұрын
I’m stressed just learning cybersecurity
@0xC47P1C35 ай бұрын
It should be fun. Don’t force yourself
@scotthearts96345 ай бұрын
@@0xC47P1C3 Right, just your take time in time it does get pretty interesting 😊🥰 I say this because I myself I'm learning it's a bit difficult in the beginning but once you start to grab the basics, stuff tends to be easier from there.
@beginanewt3 ай бұрын
You've gotta trust that the stuff that doesnt click yet will click after some time
@minyooni17582 ай бұрын
Dude i just started too and my head is spinning
@pokefanover9000000002 ай бұрын
You can do it!
@fatcatattack4 ай бұрын
Hey Josh, thanks for the vid! Next time I think a general time line of dates would be helpful to know as well for those newer to the IT scene. I’m currently an intern doing help desk and I can only dream of working my way up to cybersecurity one day
@marcellowheeler884 ай бұрын
Its amazing how having to work with certain people/customers can make or break a job in this field.
@JoshMadakor4 ай бұрын
Yeah, this is no joke
@rwxrw5 ай бұрын
Your editor has been killing it. 🔥
@bvd_vlvd5 ай бұрын
There's definitely a correlation between salary and job order. Makes sense, seniors get paid better than juniors. I think that should have had some effect on the formula since it otherwise puts less value on positions where you weren't promoted as highly
@DobBylan_4 ай бұрын
Nice video man! Could you share the timeframes for each role ? That would help a lot to put everything in perspective
@bloodyrain4142 ай бұрын
those free practice exams you have on your site are huge, thanks
@gabrielm9335 ай бұрын
Josh Your consistency is inspiring. Thank you for all you do.
@mikeymaven27 күн бұрын
This was cathartic to listen to, I'm going to do one now :)
@brandonvansylalom4 ай бұрын
The Marine Corps description was so accurate. Shoulda gave them crayons, monster/redbull and some smokes lol - prior service Marine here.
@iamkaioken5 ай бұрын
Very interesting, thanks for sharing your experiences in this aspect. Never considered these factors...it's got me thinking. Cheers!
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful! :D
@vincentnnyc2 ай бұрын
i'm a desktop support for a big company in nyc and i make about $100k. i'm 47. i would rate my job difficulty: 3 and stress: 3. i'm ok where i am now. but if they were to let me go....i'm gonna take an early retirement.
@RonalRomeroVergel24 күн бұрын
That's great 🎉
@Cesgarperi28 күн бұрын
Really informative video! Looks to me like the takeaway is: "take the higher paying job, and find out the working environment afterwards" and "if you're earning good money and you are content, don't go for something that pays slightly better" (as it might be a big jump in terms of difficulty and stress)
@TheITCornerbyJR5 ай бұрын
Man, you been everywhere. Great Stuff. ✌🏽😎
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Haha for real, thank you :)
@colemckain21 күн бұрын
Great video! this helps me out a lot
@JoshMadakor18 күн бұрын
Thank you! Glad it was helpful ^^
@vblueice3 ай бұрын
I was at first interested in Development lile every other student who sits besides you in college. But it was just too saturated for me. So I decided to change and learn IT and Security and your videos have been helping me a ton. Thanks a lot!
@simondian63803 ай бұрын
Excellent Data, thank you for the video!
@JohnWalsh20195 ай бұрын
I think the biggest factor for stress is the company culture and your manager. This list really doesn't give any sort of measure of culture or management, therefore, doesn't provide any real guidance other than the pay rates.
@David-ce1ux5 ай бұрын
Totally agree, I've been in Cyber Security for 2 years and my knowledge is increasing everyday, sometimes you get tasks that you just simply cannot do and your managers are breathing over your shoulders expecting you to know everything. Asking for help will only get me weird stares and most likely gonna get shouted at.
@JohnWalsh20195 ай бұрын
@@David-ce1ux I've been in the game awhile but keep at it David!
@craigcj59535 ай бұрын
and your co-workers
@JohnWalsh20195 ай бұрын
@@craigcj5953 yeah true.
@Mittens_Gaming21 күн бұрын
I think that getting a clearance, especially TS:SCI at least, really makes your pay options massively increase.
@JoshMadakor12 күн бұрын
Yes I agree, big scarcity on those jobs
@TravellingMemories-v7uАй бұрын
Thanks for sharing this information!
@kazi15 ай бұрын
Thanks, great breakdown
@Enjoyurble5 ай бұрын
This is interesting. I'm currently at WGU studying for Cloud Computing but am still at the CompTIA A+, Net, Sec phase and debating about how soon after completing those to start job hunting and also if I should pivot to Cyber Security, but since where I live there's a Microsoft that does quite a bit with Azure, I've so far felt like that's the best long-term opportunity. It's interesting see the salaries and perspective. Thanks.
@nmor1875 ай бұрын
For me I started applying when I started at WGU no certs and had minimal luck. It was after A+ I started getting traction but I found employers were really interested in my ITIL cert for some reason. So start applying today
@twayzy80825 күн бұрын
@@nmor187A+ like in your grade or?
@littlecreeper854317 күн бұрын
@@nmor187 if you were to give a list of the best certs to get and things to do to prepare to go into a job after 4 years(getting a degree in cybersecurity). what are some key things you would put on that list? ive just started working towards my A+ certification and i plan on getting networking+ and security+ after. I also have some things down like getting my own homelab made but im curious if there was anything else that would stand out that i could complete in that 4 year time.
@GumboRyan5 ай бұрын
This was excellent. Have your course saved. The syllabus is great!
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Great to hear it!!
@matybz175 ай бұрын
Super helpful Josh! Thank you for this video, my take on it, based on your chart I think riding out IT specialist is the way to go, if you’re not chasing money. Awesome video!
@coreyj.77765 ай бұрын
I agree and the pay is more now in my market
@Helen_Boayue5 ай бұрын
Hi Josh, Love your videos and all the resources you provide. I have done hour vulnerability project using Nessus and really want to do you current course you have out. Have you consider including payment plan for your class? Like one of these pay in 4 type thing for those who can pay it all upfront. Thanks for all you do
@QuantumNaut4 ай бұрын
A lot of it has to do with the company itself and the people. I'm a bit suprised that the Intune was a stressful complicated role really isn't that much too it and so much Microsoft support guess it really depends on the situation or deadlines
@r-test36684 ай бұрын
dude this is awesome def going to check out more of your work super cool
@JoshMadakor4 ай бұрын
Awesome thank you!
@phil7121Ай бұрын
In tech, imo senior is the sweet spot unless you're really career oriented... To make the jump from senior to something like staff, you need to work really hard to separate yourself from a lot of super smart people by showing great people skills to have influence, async communication/documentation and being able to be both in the trenches and also think big picture
@zeqprime10543 күн бұрын
an additional metric you might want to consider would be "interesting/engaging"... I've had jobs that were hard, paid crap, super stressful... but the work was interesting and only reason i stayed.
@Chucky78195 ай бұрын
Thanks I’ve been wanting to do cloud support now I know what to expect
@rafaelpaun19074 ай бұрын
Man 50k pay bump at the end, that’s wild. I make 130k now and if I had that bump I would be over the moon happy
@BenTrebing3 ай бұрын
Truly, the grass is always greener.
@zb10665 ай бұрын
Thank you. Have you done GRC? Where would it fall on your list? Thanks.
@Jenny-hk6eg5 ай бұрын
Yes I hope he sees it and reply. Also the cyber security auditing.
@NeoKurow5 ай бұрын
Senior Cybersecurity Analyst is the build that you want guys... keep it balanced and farm that money!
@jodicrawford169321 күн бұрын
What about System Admin? I heard it’s easy and not stressful & good to go into after getting the Security plus. I wanna know your opinion on that ?
@JoshMadakor12 күн бұрын
That's been my experience, but I know it depends on where you work :)
@T6_5 ай бұрын
It would be cool to see how long you spend doing each job. Also accounting for inflation, how much would your salary be for the earlier jobs like IT Specialist or Junior Network Admin?
@gregharn14 ай бұрын
Sounds about right. A couple of years ago I had the opportunity to confirm a career theory: low value jobs don't pay much & stress increases as you try to progress (over all difficulty increasing); however, there's a moment of maximum confinement that once you get past it, it's like an explosion. You're treated really well, paid well & stress begins to go down.
@JoshMadakor4 ай бұрын
Yes yes exactly, it's crazy to see/experience. Hard to break through too
@killerbung4 ай бұрын
Do you think stress goes down partly because of developing the skill set that you have acquired over time making you more effective/efficient at dealing with challenging situations?
@gregharn14 ай бұрын
@@killerbung no, it's the people. Most jobs are relatively easy (some easier than others, so called unskilled vs skilled). Once you pass what I call the crucible, people just treat you better. For example, 30-60min lunches vs whatever lunches & the company trusts you to get work done. Or you have to clock in/out vs arrive & leave whenever so long as you get work done (usually still 8 hours, but they're at your discretion). Need to take time off for any reason? Some jobs hassle you, others will say "take all the time you need to handle business". I WFH now, but my last job was fantastic too. I rolled in (usually) around 8a & went to my office & worked alone next to our server room. I sat playing movies/music with snacks while building systems & writing documentation for it all. Take lunch whenever (let my manager know as a courtesy) & usually rolled out around 5p. No weekends/ on call, rare late nights.
@littlecreeper854317 күн бұрын
@@killerbung while i have not dealt with this curve yet as ive only just started going for my degree i can say with reasonable confidence that its a mix of developing skills and meeting others that have developed their skills. When the entire team is competent they can trust each other to get work done without breathing down each others backs all the time, and when you know what you are doing you feel so much more confident, and when you have dealt with past difficulties it makes current difficulties seem not as bad.
@jamesbyrd37405 ай бұрын
Josh, what do you think about going into cloud, and then pivoting into like cloud security or even cyber?
@palstales4394Ай бұрын
super reassuring that the positions i want are ranked the highest
@remus561324 күн бұрын
hey Josh i'm really really greatful for this video. it helped me a lot into gaining insight about cyber. Was wondering if there are any cyber analyst jobs in Osaka,Japan. it would really help me out a lot if you could provide some insight on this
@JoshMadakor6 күн бұрын
Hey, glad you liked it! I actually did a interview with a guy who got a job in Osaka doing Cybersecurity. You can see it here: kzbin.info/www/bejne/ppCyd4auactqnKcsi=wd8VanlXDriqieQy There is also another business-related approach that lets you practice cyber from anywhere in the globe. I'll paste an email which I sent to someone else below: --- Getting a job in the US as a foreigner is quite difficult due to visa issues and stuff (H1B, etc.) Even more-so for a remote position. I know this is easier said than done, but if I were in your position, I would create really high quality cybersecurity content. See what works for others, then replicate it with your own spin. The higher the quality and easier it is for people to understand, the better the content will do. Consider making your social accounts and everything in the United States (VPN, VM etc.) so your audience is American. Once you have established some kind of audience, you can start making products and selling to them. You are in a decent position to do this since you've done business before. I have two courses for example, and I'm about to release a third product, (a cyber range) joshmadakor.tech/cyber joshmadakor.tech/it UnixGuy has a course: grcmastery.com/ Gerald Auger (SimplyCyber) has a course: academy.simplycyber.io/p/the-definitive-grc-analyst-program You could do some community, a course, 1:1 coaching etc in a new niche of cyber, or a niche someone else is already doing, but put your own spin on things. It's possible to make a decent amount of money with not that many subs. Hope this helps!
@adventuresofa9jaguy3223 ай бұрын
Got a job off watching some of your videos and general advisory.. You rock 💪
@CarlosDiaz-ee7uc12 күн бұрын
I’m on route to get cpa and masters in accounting but hypothetically speaking… how could I transition to cyber security or IT with that? What do I need to supplement with? Degree, certifications, experience? I feel like if I have cpa and masters, showing certs should be enough? What do you think?
@JoshMadakor12 күн бұрын
Definitely check these two videos out. They will answer your exact questions. First video is high level answer, second video is more detailed: kzbin.info/www/bejne/hF7TpJ6wi8SKh80si=8CMHwbd3xqoDVynZ kzbin.info/www/bejne/bYGzpKicl697nrcsi=qW5ZrsofUqruA6Du I'm also releasing a cyber range community soon with an internship. Of course it's not necessary, but it's worth checking out. I will announce it on KZbin eventually, just sub and bell if you wanna see it, or follow my LinkedIn ^^
@2sm0gSS5 ай бұрын
Hey josh! Love the content really enjoyed your perspective on the Gambit of your jobs and their titles. I did have a question about stress versus pay in your opinion. What do you think about GRC roles in the cybersecurity space? I.E as it relates to stress versus pay. And also enjoy your opinion on the difficulty level also.
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
I'll make a video response to this now! Basically, it really depends on your personality. GRC is arguably one of the most chill areas of cyber because you are sort-of exempt from having to deal with incidents and panic and having to be on all. But the bad part is, you have to basically do behavior modification on humans, in the sense of get people to follow policies and policies and stuff once they are in place. If you are chill with that and are OK with taking weeks or months to get the simplest of tasks done, then GRC will probably be OK. I couldn't deal with this because I was spending a lot of energy and people were just making my job difficult, haha
@2sm0gSS5 ай бұрын
@@JoshMadakor Thanks for the response. I am just finishing up the Google Cybersecurity Certificate and have been loving your content.
@ZZYDDD5 ай бұрын
If easy is that easy, why is everyone is stressing about cyber jobs?
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
It's one of those scenarios where it's hard to break into the field, but once you're in, the jobs are really not that hard TBH. (I'll make a video response to this)
@lavellelee57345 ай бұрын
@@JoshMadakorwhat exactly do you need to learn for some of the lower stress and lower level jobs? How much math is really involved? And have you done anything with software engineering?
@ZZYDDD5 ай бұрын
@@JoshMadakor looking forward to it
@amaechichukwu309728 күн бұрын
Hey Josh; off topic and absolutely no strings attached but was it “Maduakor” at any time down your lineage line?
@craigheard25043 ай бұрын
Thank you for being transparent about pay Josh. You are great as always! I may have missed it but are we to assume the timeline in your chart is for years of employment?
@thirsty33333 ай бұрын
This was helpful was thinking bout doing cyber security
@414-Devo5 ай бұрын
@JoshMadakor My current situation is I’m starting my bachelor degree in Cybersecurity at UMGC and got Secret Clearance from the military and starting a new mos as an 25B. Did the google cert and playing on doing sec+ and currently doing cisco cybersecurity analyst.Any way for me to get more experience that I can apply on resume? Or resources I can use?
@TerikaSaidIt5 ай бұрын
Do his IT & Cyber course
@pillboxgaming41444 ай бұрын
Im curious how changing the stress and difficulty scales to 1-10 would affect the outcome.
@JohnM-cd4ou4 ай бұрын
I was in the Marine Corps for 5 years as a communications and network maintenance technician, and was in Japan for most of that time. I would love to know which unit you had your unfortunate experience with, as I was always pretty impressed with our comms operators and they rarely needed my help as a maintenance guy.
@clistens33685 ай бұрын
Please do one with positions that do not require a lot of meetings.
@Maxher2405 ай бұрын
Hey Josh can you talk more about what you did to move to Japan for the security clearance ? I would love to do something similar.
@TerikaSaidIt5 ай бұрын
He just posted a video about how to get a clearance. I have one myself. It’s accurate
@Maxher2405 ай бұрын
@@TerikaSaidIt oh cool thanks!
@SomeOne-do3lm5 ай бұрын
Great stuff
@Liladelph3 ай бұрын
Loved the video
@sup47394 ай бұрын
Hello, Thank you for your video. What do you think about Data Steward and/or Analyst ? I am studying as an industrial engineering master's degree student. I have a few good experiences in the fields metioned earlier. I would love to opinion on those :) Again, loved the video ! Thank you
@SalvatoreNicoFranco5 ай бұрын
Hey Josh! I was wondering if your course, roadmaps and advices are also suitable for non-American audiences, especially Europeans. I'm sure they are, but are there any differences we should be aware of? Except the WGU problem with international students we all know. Thanks!
@TheElitegamer232 ай бұрын
So the question is why did you leave the last job, seems like a dream gig. Was youtube that much better? Layoffs? What pulled you away. Also would interesting to hear how long you were in those roles. Great vid!
@littlecreeper854317 күн бұрын
i would guess that either they cant give out info about their new job if they have one, or they retired early because if you are making 180K a year, whether you have family or not, you are set for early retirement if you dont live a lavish life. And if youtube is their dream job then making so much money would have given them enough of a cushion to be living off youtubes less than great pay.
@Jxrgenumba35 ай бұрын
As a marine i completely agree with your statement that’s why im getting out😅
@WetheuntitledАй бұрын
I’m in an msp. 10/5 for stress and 0/5 for pay. 50k and salary and apparently it’s not lawful to be salary and how do I push back since i’m 23 and everyone else is in their 40s or older
@shawnranck49825 ай бұрын
Hey Josh, I recently found your channel and i love your videos! I was wondering what's the best certification in cybersecurity to have, to be able to work remotely?
@shawnranck49824 ай бұрын
Or is a job in IT better?
@Larimuss4 ай бұрын
obviously anecdotal. But still, great info, thanks! 😮 now can you did a video on how you got those jobs 😂
@Trevor2744 ай бұрын
I just left an infosec grc job. Loved the job and the pay , but management was the worst I’ve experienced in my life.
@dangiant8015Ай бұрын
same bro i left my info sec job after my cock got latched in the printer
@georgeparks26205 ай бұрын
Hey Josh, I want to get into tech, but idk what to do. I don't have a degree, but I wanted to get certifications in either Cybersecurity or Web Development, but then again I look at how the job market is and also I don't have a degree so I guess Cybersecurity won't be good for me. I was also thinking about Coursara, but idk how that is.
@jeremy30102 ай бұрын
I just began delving into.the world of what cyber security entails. Not sure where/how to begin my education. Any advice?
@christovanwyk134811 күн бұрын
Do you think it is needed to get an Associate in Cybersecurity to get a Cybersecurity job overseas?
@JoshMadakor11 күн бұрын
It really depends on the country doing the hiring. In developed countries (Japan), I believe you need a bachelors, but it really depends on the country. There are always exceptions too and a degree is often just part of the picture
@cpt.cornelius7234 ай бұрын
Just started on my path to CISO
@JoshMadakor4 ай бұрын
Good lol
@myaccount77236Ай бұрын
hey there i really appreciate your video , is there any pathway guidance for me get started in the cyber security career, i'm not a graduate from any IT or engineering background i'm starting from scratch, since there seems to be so much to cover i'm kind of confused and overwhelmed with where to start, i'd really appreciate if you can suggest me with where to start
@adambickford87205 ай бұрын
There is little correlation between pay, stress and difficulty IME. My previous gig was 10-hour days with toxic leadership, cutting edge/difficult code (reactive programming) and free nights and weekend support. My current gig pays far better, sticks to 40 hours and is honestly so boring I'm getting antsy. No huge uptime/performance needs, etc.
@wcsdiaries3 ай бұрын
What is your current job? Any advice for an IT guy trying to decide on a path?
@samsonvladislav41674 ай бұрын
For your cybersecurity program, would we still need to get the Security + cert in addition?
@lifestylewithjoyce47365 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing ❤❤
@elmono53273 ай бұрын
How do I get the secret/government clearance? That one is gate keeping me from applying to the local tech jobs
@untouchable360x2 ай бұрын
Fool to be an Individual Contributor with such low salaries. Management is better career path. Engineering Manager starts around $200k and VP is around $300k. Lower stress and higher pay. No skills whatsoever. Bad decisions happen, management always blame it on an IC.
@TerikaSaidIt5 ай бұрын
Hey Josh, are you gonna patch the OpenVAS lab? Its having some issues
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
I won't patch OpenVAS lab though, OpenVAS is not really good honestly, I mean it's free at least.. I'm making a new product/community that will teach/use Tenable, which is a proper enterprise vulnerability management platform. I fully licensed it and have created several labs. It's almost done :).
@EngrDJDebug5 ай бұрын
Wow from desktop admin to a senior cybersecurity analyst how were you able to pull that off? You didn't even go thru a junior cybersecurity analyst role and nor I'm assuming you dont have previous experience work as a cybersecurity analyst.
@goddessofwands93623 ай бұрын
I'm in Devry right now going for my Associates in cyber security. Does your school offer job placement?
@Technie8728 күн бұрын
What do you do now? Just a speculation, it looks like you sell courses/ owner operator, class instructor of your IT business?
@ItsBarnabyJones2 ай бұрын
What about full time IT support help desk which is where most people are suggested to start in IT? Thanks
@Baduruzwi4 ай бұрын
How much does a Microsoft servers class, like implementing DNS and DHCP and all that grand fun stuff apply to cyber security jobs? like is it literally a base at all lol?
@toasted-kitten5 ай бұрын
I think the value you gain from jobs can be based on many factors for different people, salary being a main component obviously. For example, in my current position as a SOC analyst, I make more than I've made in the past and it's my first FTE security position out of college. Which already makes it incredibly valuable on top of the insane number of days off I get to focus on hobbies. However, the value comes down a little due the fact it is incredibly easy, and while I like easy, I wish there was more to be done and more opportunity to hone and develop skills on the job.
@Unortha5 ай бұрын
Do you have any or are working towards any certs? I am going to college for cybersec and trying to get a SOC analyst job
@halowaffles5 ай бұрын
You won't get a lot of training/skills/opportunity on the job these days. There's not a lot of upward mobility in jobs anymore, as they want to bracket your salary into a range that can't actually be exceeded by market value. This is why job hopping has become a lot more prevalent than working your way up in one company. Enjoy the pay for an easy job while you level up your skills outside of work.
@miropecovic38765 ай бұрын
Hello Mr. Madakor. I love watching your videos and am considering working in the IT field. Would getting a university degree in IT be worth it? There are some options to "hack" university and spend less money and time there, but I am not sure how much a degree would benefit me. I know many companies value experience more than a degree, and that you have a course to help people get a job quickly. I was wondering what your thoughts are on this? Thank you for your videos! They are a tremendous help!
@carsonjamesiv25125 ай бұрын
Interesting!😃
@keanu32604 ай бұрын
I was watching one of your other videos and you recommended automation as a low stress job but here it seems you've changed your mind perhaps that other video was when you were first starting off? haha oh nvm maybe it was the last role you were talking about.
@menachemdavid35354 ай бұрын
Seems like Cyber Security anything gives you the most job value. Three of the jobs with the most value are cyber security.
@briancook61585 ай бұрын
How'd you make the jump from desktop admin to senior cyber security analyst?
@marcusmcdow35 ай бұрын
Can comptia security + get me a help desk job if I cant find a cybersecurity job?
@JoshMadakor5 ай бұрын
Short answer: It's possible Long answer: It's possible, but if you have to do a lot of other stuff as well. Watch this video for a full explanation, it will help a lot: kzbin.info/www/bejne/hF7TpJ6wi8SKh80si=qWQCq_ew8jsBFI1u