Cloud Security Topics Covered in CloudMASTER Cloud Computing Classes

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If you're planning to implement cloud computing solutions, a robust understanding of cloud security issues, options, and solutions is essential. Unfortunately, cloud security is one of the most difficult to find tech skills. We knew this when we worked with Logical Operations and the National Cloud Technologists Association to author the CloudMASTER cloud computing classes, so we made security coverage one of our top priorities for the classes and the CloudMASTER certifications. What security topics are covered in this IT training? We made an infographic to show you. Enjoy. 

 

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CarverTC provides CloudMASTER cloud computing and IT training in Portland Oregon and across the United States. Moving to the cloud, or already there and have questions? Reach out for a free consultation at cloud@carvertc.com

 

Pay is a Big Reason to Get CloudMASTER Cloud Computing Certification

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There are lots of IT certifications out there, and for good reason. They open up IT professional careers, help experienced IT pros move into new career paths, and help prove your skills sets are up to date. Coincidentally, certifications also tend to lead to better pay, more promotions, and increase job mobility. As traditional IT migrates to the cloud, evidence suggests the same will be true for CloudMASTER cloud computing certifications like the certifications that accompany the CloudMASTER cloud computing classes we offer on our class schedule. We've laid the evidence out in this SlideShare. Enjoy.

 

 
If you're interested in cloud computing training, here are some other great links:
 
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CarverTC offers CloudMaster Cloud Computing Training in Portland Oregon and nationally throughout the United States and Canada in our virtual classrooms.
 
 
 

Preparation is the Key to the Challenge of Cloud Data Visibility

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In a recent article in CIO, Maria Korolov reviewed the results of a survey from IDG. In that survey, it was no surprise that cloud security stood out as one of the major concerns of CIOs. What might surprise some people however, was the growing concern amongst CIOs, IT managers, and Compliance Officers about data visibility in the cloud. Simply put, with highly distributed and redundant architecture, you don't always know where your data is, especially as it moves around a cloud provider's infrastructure. This can be very problematic in scenarios with sensitive, or regulated data where compliance audits happen regularly. In this article, we'll look at the issue, and tell you what you can do right now, to help mitigate the problem.

The Data Visibility Issue

In the article, David Rubal, chief technologist for data and analytics at Herndon, Vir.-based DLT Solutions, stated the problem:

"In a cloud computing environment, data is stored in logical pools, the physical storage spans multiple servers and often locations. "With this model, it is very difficult for a cloud provider to pinpoint exactly where any portion of customer data is stored."

The issue here is when you're dealing with regulated data, you will be periodically audited for compliance. You have to respond to those audits and provide the information obligated to auditors about the regulated data. Since you no longer control that data or store it on-premises, you have to rely on your cloud service vendor to provide accurate, verifiable information about your data. Remember, compliance involves access of all sorts, electronic and physical. You might need to answer questions like:

  • Is the data in one data center or more that one?
  • Who has electronic and physical access to those data centers?
  • Does (or has) the data move across national boarders, where access laws and regulations might be different?

This is an important issue for organizations that must maintain compliance. If an auditor finds a problem with your data, it's on you to pay the fines and fix the problem. You can blame your cloud service vendor, but the fines are still yours to pay, and the regulating agency will put the onus on you to fix the problem.

Better Tools and Visibility are Are Needed

As stated in the article, there is a growing ecosystem of third party tools designed to provider visibility, security, and monitoring. There is also is a growing awareness on the part of cloud service providers, including major players like Amazon, Microsoft, and Box, that they need to make visibility in their solutions better.  However, as Richard Cassidy, technical director at Houston-based Alert Logic, Inc. is quoted as stated in the the article, "Vendors aren't required to share proprietary security information, and many will often provide details only to their largest customers."  It's also important to note that any new tools, and plans to increase data or infrastructure visibility won't help you if you're audited today. 

Other Options

There are of course other options to help you maintain compliance and achieve at least some of the benefits of cloud computing. First, a hybrid cloud may be an option for keeping sensitive data on-premises. Hybrid cloud solutions are popular because, as this Forbes article explains, it gives organizations choices and the flexibility to put infrastructure and data where it makes the most sense. Of course, those benefits have to be compared to potential downsides of keeping infrastructure on-premises, including the loss of rapid provisioning, rapid elasticity, and cloud provider support. 

Another option is private cloud. Private cloud implementations, at least according to some reports, are growing in popularity with certain types of enterprises. The major downside is the expense, both in hardware, and expertise needed to run private clouds effectively and efficiently. After all, if you implement a private cloud, you're in the cloud computing business along with whatever else you're doing. For some enterprises, especially large enterprises in certain regulatory environments, private clouds are the best choice. For smaller businesses and many other types of large enterprises, private cloud offers many challenges. Also, many industry experts question whether private clouds will be able to keep up with the innovation you'll see in public clouds. 

Key Takeaway: Compare and Evaluate Cloud Providers and Deployment Models

The key takeaway for us from this article, was the following quote:

"46 percent of the survey respondents said that they need to ensure that cloud service providers’ security meets their compliance requirements before moving ahead with deployments."

We couldn't agree more. You have to evaluate cloud service provider service level agreements (SLAs), and ask questions before you select a provider. You can only count on support, access, and visibility that you get in writing from your provider. Obviously we're biased because we offer cloud computing training. But, as the authors of these courses, we can tell you they were written to address just these types of issues. The CloudMASTER cloud computing classes and certifications not only cover compliance and audit issues in-depth across multiple lessons, the classes go beyond that, teaching critical cloud provider comparison and evaluation skills. Since CloudMASTER is vendor neutral, students review, compare, and discuss SLA provisions from different providers and are taught to consider vendor provisions through the lens of their corporate requirements rather than "industry norms." There's even a  a list of recommended compliance and audit related questions you should ask of any cloud provider you're considering. In addition, third party monitoring tools are covered at length, giving students hands-on experience with tools like Rightscale and other monitoring and management solutions that might be invaluable during an audit. Combine all of that with the deep coverage of public, private, and hybrid cloud implementations offered in the courses, students will leave CloudMASTER training well prepared to evaluate cloud service providers, and implementation options to find the best solution to meet your organizations requirements. 

Conclusion

The article makes it very clear. Cloud data visibility is a major concern for CIOs and IT managers. Cloud providers are trying to open up visibility to their proprietary infrastructure, and third parties are swarming to fill the gaps. But that's not enough if you have to be compliant today and tomorrow. It's on you to be compliant, and respond to audits. Your best preparation is to train your people well. Train them to think critically and evaluate providers, their SLAs, compare service offerings, and third party tools to give your organization the visibility it needs to be compliant every day.

Over to You

If you have tools you use, or processes in place to help your organization have visibility into your data that's stored in the cloud, let me know in the comments. 

 

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CloudMASTER cloud computing class curriculum was authored by principals at CarverTC in conjunction with the cloud experts at the National Cloud Technologists Association and are distributed exclusively through our partnerLogical Operations

 

Why CarverTC is the Best Choice for CloudMASTER Cloud Computing Classes

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As we have recently decided to start offering public training courses, my contacts have been asking me two questions; "Why now?" and, "What makes you better than other training centers."  The first question comes from the fact that we've offered private training for years and have shied away from public training even when our clients have suggested we should do it. We've answered the "why now" question in a separate article which explains why we added CloudMASTER certification training to our public training schedule. This video explains our approach to all the training we deliver, including CloudMASTER cloud computing classes, and why, we believe that makes us the best choice for CloudMASTER certification training. To see our full article on this, click here.

 

 

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Cloud Security is One of the Most Difficult To Find Tech Skills

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We talk a lot about the CloudMASTER cloud computing classes that we authored and put on our public schedule. We've done articles pointing out how the classes and certifications map to job needs and career goals, and and we've built infographics detailing what's covered in CloudMASTER training. But we know that's not enough. Where's the evidence? We were waiting to show you. As the year draws to a close technologists, influencers, and industry leaders start to publish survey results and make predictions for the coming year. Some of those articles have now started to come out. The predictions in those articles on which tech jobs and skills are in demand, and which cloud computing issues concern CIOs the most, show the skills that employers will need the most over the next 12 to 18  months. In this article, we'll talk about one of the biggest on the list, security, and show you how CloudMASTER can get you, or your organization ready to meet the biggest cloud computing challenges ahead. 

Cloud Computing Security

cloud security difficult to find tech skillsIt's no surprise that security remains one of the top concerns of CIOs, and IT professionals. Your data is the crown jewel of your business. A breach can leak corporate secrets, customer data, and put in you competitive, legal, or financial risk - and that is a serious over simplification of the issues and risks. 

Sharon Florentine, in an article published in Computerworld put security as the number 1 difficult to find tech skill. She stated that, "Even organizations that balked at cloud technology in the past are finally jumping on board, driven by the efficiency and cost-savings the cloud can provide." She interviewed Matt Sigelman, CEO of Burning Glass, a labor market analytics and research firm who said, that,   "Even as organizations become more data-driven and move to the cloud, they're worried about how to secure that data, so cloud security skills are really important"

Maria Korolov, in a CIO article stated that security was one of the top concerns for cloud computing adoption.  Citing a new survey by IDG she states that "46 percent of the survey respondents said that they need to ensure that cloud service providers’ security meets their compliance requirements before moving ahead with deployments." 

Perhaps a CGS blog article from March on what keeps CIOs up at night stated the problem best:

"CIOs and IT leaders are, unfortunately, coming to the realization that they may not be prepared for the worst case security breech amidst the current climate of heightened awareness."

Security Training is Essential

If you're an organization, these are issues that must be addressed. If you're an IT professional, this is an opportunity. Either way, CloudMASTER cloud computing classes and certifications offer a comprehensive, cost effective solution. Security planning, preparation, and implementation are addressed in all three of the CloudMASTER classes. 

CloudMASTER training demonstrates how a layered security approach, securing data in transit at all levels, and securing data at rest at all levels,  provides the best defense against threats both on-premises, in the cloud, and on the wire in between. Everything from database encryption, to virtual machine encryption, to file encryption, to network encryption and more are covered. Not only do students learn the fundamental concepts and best practices implementation recommendations, they are taught to critically think about security at every stage of cloud adoption evolution. When comparing and evaluating cloud solutions and cloud service providers, when provisioning, monitoring, and managing cloud services, and when designing and deploying cloud infrastructure, apps, and solutions.  

While none of the CloudMASTER classes are specifically focused on cloud security, security is ever-present in course lessons and topics. It is so, because with security you have to be thinking about all the time when you're thinking about the cloud. But, to put a number on it, of the 13 days of training spread across the three CloudMASTER classes, Technologies, Operations, and Architecture, nearly two full days are dedicated to security planning, best practice implementation, and hands-on with with platforms and tools.

CloudMASTER is vendor neutral cloud computing training and that gives IT professionals and organizations a serious advantage. The training isn't specific to any one platform, service or technology, and teaches students to compare and evaluate cloud solutions with a discerning eye based on project requirements. In fact, CloudMASTER goes further than planning and implementing security, and addresses continued monitoring and even addresses the critical role non-platform tools play in performing vulnerability testing and penetration testing.

Conclusion

CloudMASTER cloud computing classes and certifications provide comprehensive vendor neutral cloud computing training. See this list of security concepts, best practices, and key considerations are addressed throughout the curriculum. This focus on security means organizations can get training the provides peace of mind when moving to, or securing cloud infrastructure and services. For IT professionals it provides difficult to find tech skills that organizations need, right now. That translates to better career opportunities, pay, and mobility. Checkout CloudMASTER training today for yourself, and your organization. 

- Bob

 

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How to Mitigate the Problems and Costs of Cloud Service Vendor Lock In

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Cloud service vendor lock in is an issue that keeps CEOs and CIOs up at night. Vendor in lock (also called supplier or provider lock in) has existed in the IT industry and other industries for a long time. The problem is simple. An organization uses, and becomes dependent on the tools, technologies, processes, and services of a specific vendor. If you wish to change vendors, or you need to change vendors, you have to replace those tools, technologies, processes, and services you've become so dependent on. On top of that you have to retrain your people. It's a costly and time consuming proposition. The prospect is particularly stressful to CEOs and CIOs because it's not an "if," it's a "when."  At some point, you will have to change cloud vendors. That means at some point you will have to deal with cloud vendor lock in. In this article, we'll look at the issues that can arise from cloud vendor lock in, and give you strategies to help you thoughtfully prepare, and mitigate problems that can arise.

Vendor Lock In Isn't a New Issue but the Cloud Adds New Challenges

Being dependent on a single vendor isn't necessarily new to the IT world, as organizations who have built large Microsoft, Sun, or Linux infrastructure environments can attest. However, cloud service vendor lock in brings its own set of issues that are unique to cloud computing environments, and that many organizations aren't prepared for when they arise. These include: 

  • Data migration. Cloud applications and infrastructure tend to be accompanied by a lot of data. What hapAdobeStock_4974492 (Custom).jpegpens if you wish to move it to a different cloud provider? Many providers offer expedited services to move data into their clouds, but offer fewer options for moving data out of their clouds. Moving multiple terabytes of data can be inconvenient at best. At the worst it can be costly, and very time consuming especially if bandwidth for data download is limited. Remember, the data is in a cloud data center, you can't just plug in a high speed direct connection and dump the data to a portable drive (unless the cloud service provider gives you that option). 
  • Proprietary provider services. This is where things can move from inconvenient to complicated. Many cloud service providers offer application services such as messaging, queuing, data access, storage, authentication and more. These services fully integrate with other cloud services provided by the vendor such as redundancy, elasticity, and multi-regional deployment. These are the types of benefits that organizations hope to achieve by moving their applications and infrastructure to the cloud. The problem is, these services and add-ons are often proprietary. If you want to change cloud providers, you're going to need to rewrite the affected portions of your applications, or implement replacement services. That can mean a lot of time and expense rewriting code, redeploying services, and testing both infrastructure, and applications, just to get to the same place with a new cloud service provider, that you're already at with your old cloud service provider.  
  • Technology choices and availability. Another complication is that non-proprietary technologies available from one cloud service provider may not be the same as those offered by others. Many providers offer Microsoft and Linux platforms, but the flavors and add-ons offered may be different. Moreover, databases, and third party integrations may not be the same. This adds additional layers of complexity that must be considered when it comes time to switch cloud service providers. 

No matter how big you are, or what providers you work with, these issues aren't easy to address. See the issues that Spotify ran into when it moved from AWS to Google Cloud.

Why is Cloud Service Vendor Lock In Inevitable?

There are many reasons organizations switch cloud service providers including:

  • To get better pricing.
  • To get access to new or better features, capabilities, or regions.
  • To address new compliance needs or concerns.
  • To get better service.

But the impetus to switch cloud service providers may not come from inside your organization, it may come from outside. Your company might merge with another, or be acquired. After which there may be a desire or need to consolidate cloud service providers.

The need to switch may even be forced on an organization by the current cloud service provider itself. Providers offer a commodity of services, and grow by offering the most popular set of services to their customers. Services, applications, and integrations take time and money to support and maintain. Services that aren't in high demand may be discontinued. If your organization is using a service, application, or integration that is being shut down by a service provider, you're going to have to find a replacement. In that event, the best choice may be to switch to another service provider.

Ultimately, there is one reason why cloud service vendor lock in is unavoidable. Time. Over time it's likely the service provider or your organization will change to such an extent that you will need to seriously consider switching providers. Consider this, does your IT infrastructure look anything like it did 10 years ago? The need to switch cloud service providers is not necessarily inevitable, but it is highly likely. You absolutely need to plan for it. 

Mitigate Vendor Lock in Impact with Planning and Training
Assuming your organization will have to deal with vendor lock in is a good approach, because it forces you to plan and train for it. Planning helps you do the following:

  • Ask the right questions as soon as possible. Including how data can be migrated off of a provider's system, and if there are any exit migration services available. 
  • Mitigate the three primary pain points created by vendor lock in:
    • Expense. Companies that casually adopt cloud services as they grow, and don't train or prepare for vendor lock in are often AdobeStock_120869172 (Custom).jpegblindsided by the costs of migration, development, or consultant fees required to move or consolidate cloud services.
    • Time. If a provider discontinues a service, or regulations force your organization to adopt a level of compliance not supported by your provider, you're suddenly on a cloud service change time line that is not of your creation, and that is not under your control. Proper preparation and monitoring will help ensure that you see changes coming, and have contingencies in place.  
    • Seamless transition. Whether you decide to switch cloud service providers, or have to switch cloud service providers, you want a seamless transition. Your people, your partners, and your customers must have the infrastructure, applications, and tools available to do their jobs. Without that, your business is at risk. 

Honestly, the best time to plan how to mitigate vendor lock in is before you adopt any cloud service, and whenever you add a new cloud service. If you haven’t been doing that, you should evaluate your existing services as soon as possible and start developing a plan to mitigate vendor lock in. It all starts by asking the right questions, comparing and evaluating cloud service provider options. But how?

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The best way is training.  Training is what gives your IT staff the information and skills to plan properly, perform those cloud provider comparison and evaluations, and identify the best options, both now and later. Certainly, consulting companies can help with this. We help our clients with these types of evaluations. But technologies, cloud provider services, and organizational needs are always evolving. The vendor lock in mitigation plan that you develop today will be obsolete at some point in the future. It will need to be updated with every cloud service added, and with every change in IT, security, and compliance requirements.  Well trained, in-house staff is the best resource for this. 

The best training to prepare staff to do this, are the CloudMASTER cloud computing classes we offer. The Technologies course has an entire lesson on addressing barriers to cloud adoption including vendor lock in and compliance, and provides hands-on training with tools like Rightscale, a cloud infrastructure management tool, that can be used to manage multiple clouds and move configurations and data seamlessly between cloud providers, blunting the impact of vendor lock in. The Operations course provides hands on experience deploying and managing apps and infrastructure on nearly 20 of the most popular cloud services including AWS, Azure, Rackspace, Chef, Heroku, and Digital Ocean and more. IT staff that take the Operations course will have touched, used, and seen what different cloud providers have to offer. The Architecture course teaches learners to consider things like vendor lock in, security, and compliance from the very start, at the point of initial cloud infrastructure design.

The CloudMASTER classes, and the associated certifications are vendor neutral, and that provides what we believe is the biggest benefit of these classes. They teach students to think critically about cloud services. They teach the skills to perform cloud provider comparison and evaluations. To think about the future, and look for the best solution in a sea of cloud service options.  IT staff that have taken CloudMASTER training are going to be well equipped to prepare any organization to address the challenges of cloud service vendor lock in now, and as the organization, requirements, and cloud services evolve. 

Over to you

I've you've experience vendor lock in related to cloud services, let me know in the comments. 

-Bob

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Why Get the CloudMASTER Cloud Certification? Pay and Career Options.

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As we've been talking about the CloudMASTER certification training classes we've placed on our public class schedule, we've been getting a lot of questions about the CloudMASTER cloud certifications. People who've looked at the class outlines, and hands-on activities love what they see, but some are uncertain about the certifications. Is it worth it going the extra mile to get certified? First let me say that CarverTC doesn't make any money off of the certifications, or the exam process, as we aren't an exam center. That said, it's definitely worth it to get certified if you've gone to the trouble to take the courses. Why? Money. IT certifications lead to:

  • Better pay.
  • Job security.
  • Upward mobility in your career.
  • More employment options.
  • Employment flexibility.

We've put it all down in this infographic. 

Get 5% off your first CloudMASTER class for a limited time! Click for details.

Why Get the CloudMASTER Cloud Certification? Pay and Career Options.

If you're interested in CloudMaster cloud computing classes, see our class schedule. 

 

 

 

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Is CloudMASTER Cloud Computing Certification Like MCSE or Network+?

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As I've talked to more IT Professionals about the CloudMASTER cloud computing certifications, I keep getting asked the same question, "Is this an MCSE type of certification or a Network+ type of certification?" IT pros want job skills that will make their daily and future job tasks easier. They also want to make sure that they're keeping up with technology trends, and making themselves as marketable as possible so that they can move up in their current organization, or get better jobs in other organizations. So where does a cloud computing certification like CloudMASTER fit? Is it the new MCSE or the new Network+? It doesn't replace either, but it does have similarities to both. These certifications are as important to professional development and job advance as each of those, but it doesn't replace either. On top of that, there are components of the CloudMASTER certification that make it uniquely compelling. I'll lay all of that out for you in this article.

Key Facts You Should Know about CloudMASTER

To better understand where the these certifications fit, you can learn about the three certifications:

  • Cloud Technologist
  • Cloud Operations
  • Cloud Architecture

See this article on the three certifications, the associated classes, what's covered, and who should consider taking them. 

Vendor Neutral Like Network+

vendor neutral cloud computing classesSimilarly to the Network+ certification, the CloudMASTER is vendor neutral cloud computing training and certification. It doesn't focus on a single vendor like Amazon Web Services (AWS), we focus on over 20 platforms, tools, and technologies. Platforms including AWS, Azure, Rackspace Cloud, Heroku, and Digital Ocean. Tools include administration, management and orchestration tools like Chef, and Rightscale. This is important in cloud computing training and certification because multi-cloud implementations are on the rise. And those are just the tools you get hands-on with, many others are discussed in the classes. In addition to the platforms and tools, the certifications cover a broad range planning steps, as well as more complex skills. From security, privacy, and compliance planning, to migration, implementation, and management of cloud services. 

So, to address the question, are the CloudMaster certifications like Network+? They are, insofar as they are broad and cover a range of common tasks, and challenges that any IT professional will have to face in a cloud project or environment. But Network+ addresses fundamentals. It's often seen by IT pros as an entry level certification. Essentially a first step to landing a IT support job. The CloudMASTER certifications are much more than that.

Again, there are three certifications. The most entry level certification is the Cloud Technologist certification. That class and certification are the starting point on the path to CloudMASTER cloud computing certification. The Technologist certification tests on the fundamental tenants of cloud computing, the benefits cloud provides for businesses, and the skills around selecting, and implementing cloud services. The certification also tests on skills for evaluating, and migrating to Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions.  

Vendor Neutral, but Not Vendor Free

The concepts and skills taught in Network+ are truly vendor agnostic. These include fundamental like DNS, communication protocols, network connections and so forth. The concepts and technologies are truly independent of the vendor supplying the hardware, product, or services. The TCP/IP stack works that same on all platforms. Cat5 cable from one vendor plugs into ethernet compatible NICs of other vendors, and DNS works the same way no matter who you buy the service from or if you provide your own DNS.

So, while private cloud implementations are growing in popularity, most organizations will be using some public cloud services. That means IT staff will likely be dealing with cloud service vendors. The CloudMASTER certification training classes teach, and the certifications test on real knowledge, and the ability to perform actual cloud computing IT tasks. Hands-on learning with real products is must. So when we were writing the courses, we chose some of the largest, and most popular cloud services providers such as AWS, Azure, and Chef as the vendors we would use to provide that hands-on experience.

In this way, CloudMASTER certifications are similar to the MCSE certifications. You will get some general task related questions on exams, you will also likely see questions the rely on specific knowledge and experience working with some of the larger cloud service platforms. 

Going Deeper, A Lot Deeper 

CloudComputingDiagram.jpegThese certifications don't just verify that you know how to point and click in a cloud vendor management app. Knowing your way around some of the more popular cloud vendor products is just the start. The exams test on your ability to apply those skills and think critically to address common implementation issues such as:

  • Comparing and selecting the best solutionsn based on requirements.
  • Preparing a migration plan to migrate on-premises software to SaaS. 
  • Automating cloud administration tasks to implement true elastic scalability in a cloud solution.
  • Designing an Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) solution down to compute specifications, storage, memory and database to replace on-premises infrastructure.

By the way, our CloudMASTER cloud computing classes train on all of these scenarios and more. Check out the class schedule.

In this way, CloudMASTER cloud computing certification is similar to some of the advanced MCSE certification exams. You will be tested on how to put all the pieces of the together to create a function, secure, cost effective cloud solution. 

Breadth and Depth to Provide Unique Awareness

We feel the benefit goes beyond the exam. Passing the certification doesn't prove that you took the classes, it proves that you can think critcally and apply a strong functional understanding of cloud computing implementations to address cloud computing issues. The majority of class, and exam focus on critically thinking and applying knowledge in this way to addres challenges like:

  • Integration of multiple cloud services and solutions.
  • Addressing barriers to cloud migration inside your company (it happens more than you think). 
  • Mitigating vendor lock-in.
  • Using a layered approach for better security (a topic the keeps CIOs up at night).
  • Addressing how to migrate legacy applications to the cloud.

Where do the CloudMASTER Cloud Computing Certifications fit?

If you're dealing with a lot of Microsoft Server Technologies, the MCSE certification path is still a good career choice. If you're starting out in an IT career, Network+ is, and will remain, one of the foundational certifications. I would say that Cloud Technologist would come right after Network+. In today's business world, if you're in IT, odds are you'll have to work with cloud computing services. It's now fundamental as setting up Internet connectivity. In many cases, accessing cloud services is the reason you're setting up the Internet connection! If you're interested in being a server administrator, Cloud Operations is a must have certification. The applications and servers that you implement and manage will be likely in the cloud. If you want to step up to that top tier, and be able to design cloud networks, hybrid cloud implementations, or private clouds, the Cloud Architecture certification will prove you have the knowledge and critical thinking to succeed. 

Over to You

Have you been looking into cloud computing certifications? What have you considered and why? Let me know in the comments. 

 

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The Skills and Tools Covered in CloudMASTER Cloud Computing Classes [Infographic]

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We've been getting a lot of questions about the three CloudMASTER certification training classes we offer. You can see the outlines for each of the courses at the links below:

But since people are asking, we wanted to put all the benefits in one easy to consume place so we decided to create this infographic. In it, we tell you the platforms, tools, and technologies that you get hands-on experience with. We also show you the skills taught related to SaaS, PaaS, and Iaas. Finally, we show you how the CloudMASTER cloud computing classes address key cloud computing concerns of executives, and key implementation challenges faced by IT pros, and why the classes, and the associated CloudMASTER cloud computing certifications might be a good choice for your organization, or your career. Enjoy!

While this used to be an interactive infographic, due to performance issues we changed it to a standard image. Not spots and links are no longer active. 

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The CarverTC Approach to CloudMASTER Certification Training

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As we have recently decided to start offering public training courses, my contacts have been asking me two questions; "Why now?" and, "What makes you better than other training centers."  The first question comes from the fact that we've offered private training for years and have shied away from public training even when our clients have suggested we should do it. We've answered the "why now" question in a separate article which explains why we added CloudMASTER certification training to our public training schedule. In this article, I'll answer the other question, and explain why we're different, and why we believe we are better than other training centers. 

We Only Teach What We Do

We have a thriving consultancy, and, although we do content marketing, training, development, and cloud, our services are interrelated. Our story tells you how.  Obviously, for anything we teach, we take time to learn the flow of the curriculum to make sure the class is skillfully delivered, but the expertise comes from our experience. If we don't do it, we don't teach it. That helps us ensure that we're adding real, experience based value. 

We Focus on Teaching What We Author

Currently, the only classes on our schedule, are classes CarverTC instructors have authored. Peter Lammers and I were the primary authors of the three CloudMASTER cloud computing classes currently available, and I played a role in designing the CloudMASTER certifications. We've authored other courses, such as Google AdWords, Google Analytics, and NISM Social Media Strategist classes that we offer.  While we may consider offering courses we don't write in the future, for now, we're focusing on the courses we author.

We Address the Challenges of Professional Learning

One of the biggest barriers for us in terms of offering CloudMASTER certification training on a public training schedule, is that we don't like how many training courses are delivered. Sometimes training doesn't work for some people because its all day, every day. While it's good to get students out of their day-to-day life and to immerse them in a new technology, often, it's just not realistic. People come late to class (both online and on-site classes) because they have to put out fires in the morning. The may also leave class early for the same reason. Many students check out early toward the end of the day because emails are backing up and they don't want to work late into the evening doing their day job.

In total, there were four issues we wanted to address, and we believe we have addressed them in a way that allows us to provide a better training experience: 

  • How to reach people anywhere: This was the easy one. We addressed this by offering virtual classes using world class software (Go To Meeting) that can facilitate discussions, deliver digital handouts and other information. This lets us deliver classes anywhere where there is an Internet connection.
  • Ensure students get follow up support during and after the class: To address this we went back to college to borrow the concept of office hours. We are online at several pre-defined times, after classroom hours on training weeks to answer questions, and provide additional guidance. We also hold office hours weekly for two weeks following course delivery. We also provide email Q&A for 30 days post class. That way, you can ask questions once you're back in your environment, using the knowledge and skills you gained in class. 
  • How to respect trainee's professional life, and keep students focused while in class:  These are two different problems that have a single solution --reduced class hours. Most training centers run classes from 9:00 AM to 4:30 PM. They include an hour lunch and two half-hour breaks. So you spend the entire day there (with travel time to and from the training center). Of that  5.5 hours is spent in the classroom, and 2 hours is spent outside the classroom. Our classes are virtual, so there's no travel time. You can attend from home or from the office, whichever let's you stay plugged in and focused. Moreover, our class hours are from 9:00-3:00 Pacific time, with a half hour lunch, and two 15 minute breaks. That's 5 hours of focused class time.  We, and other online training centers, have used this formula successfully. With no travel time and this schedule,  trainees get their start of day, and end of day back for email and other work related tasks. Moreover, cutting down the amount of class time helps students focus. We can often cover the same amount of course material more effectively because students aren't distracted by work tasks, and because our class time ends before end of the day fatigue sets in.  Is there time for sidebars, additional questions, and discussion of personal scenarios? Absolutely, that's what office hours and email Q&A support are for.

Conclusion

We feel that our method of delivery, ensuring that we're only teaching materials we know well, from a place of experience, coupled with class delivery arrangements that respect trainees professional needs, while still providing time and follow up support to address questions,  provides the best possible training experience for the classes on our schedule.

 

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Why We Added CloudMASTER Cloud Computing Classes to Our Class Schedule

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We recently posted our first schedule of public training classes. While we've been creating and delivering technical training courses for years, this is the first time we've decided to offer public classes. As I've been reaching out to my contacts to let them know, I've gotten one question, "Why now?" The simple answer is, CloudMASTER cloud computing classes are a unique compelling offering that, we think, could change the cloud computing certification landscape for a lot of IT organizations and IT professionals. In this article, I'll explain why this certification and the training curriculum moved us to offer these courses to the public.

A Technical Company with a Communication Problem

We've often said that we're a technical company with a communication problem. We cut our teeth over 16 years learning, then explaining highly technical products and services. We were "techies that could talk." That has served us well over the years as we have grew a consultancy that served hi-tech businesses and helped them launch their products. Training was been a natural fit for us. After learning everything there was to know about a product or service, be it an operating system release, or piece of social media marketing software, delivering training on those topics was a natural follow-on. Mentoring was another big part of our digital marketing consultancy. Training our clients how to set up social media profiles, or how to a content creation process in place, or to manage their communities was essential. Eventually we formalized some curriculum and started delivering that training as well.

Private or Public Training?

We did all of that training privately.  At various points we advertised our curriculum, but we always did training in a responsive model, delivering training after clients requested it.  We didn't want the hassle of running a training center, and having to put "butts in seats." We also had some issues with the way most public training courses were run. But, we were doing more and more cloud computing consulting, so, when we got the opportunity to partner with the National Cloud Technologists Association to build some courses to support their CloudMASTER cloud computing certification credential, we were forced to rethink our reservations about offering public training.

A Growing Cloud Consultancy Changes the Question

Cloud consulting was growing as a competency as more and more of our development customers used Platform as a Service (PaaS) to build and deploy apps, and as more of our digital marketing customers used cloud based apps to perform marketing services. As we interacted in these engagements, we provided consulting services from comparisons and evaluations of cloud solutions, to planning, guidance, and implementation. As I was working with Logical Operations and the NCTA subject matter experts to design the courses, the three natural roles, of cloud technologist, cloud operations, and cloud architecture emerged. I designed the courses around those three roles. Taking our experiences mentoring and consulting for clients, and NCTA's deep expertise in large and complex cloud migrations,  we found that each class could play a role in our cloud computing and development consulting. So the question became, if we were going to teach it to our clients, why not put it on a public schedule? 

Making the Decision

We knew from our experience that people needed this training. We knew that these classes would replace the ad-hoc mentoring we were doing for clients. We felt it was going to be popular and valuable, on par with Microsoft MCP/MCSE training and certification, or A+ or Network+ training and certification.  So we sat down to address the concerns we had internally about offering public training. We developed a custom approach to delivering training both for cloud computing, and digital marketing topics. The more we worked through our approach, the more confident we became we could delivery high quality, experienced-based training, broadly. So we decided to post a public schedule. 

Conclusion

Simply put, the growth of cloud computing, the content in these courses, and their associated certification paths were too compelling. We would be supplying the training privately anyway. That coupled with broad applicability to IT organizations and IT professionals everywhere, made us address our concerns about offering public classes. Once we did that, there were no more barriers to offering these courses publicly, and we're very excited to do so.

 

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CloudMASTER Certifications:  What They Are, and When You Need Them

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Since we added the CloudMASTER certification training classes to our class schedule, we've been getting a lot of questions about the CloudMASTER certifications themselves. IT pros and IT managers want to know what the different certifications are, how the certifications map to different points in an IT career, and about the overall CloudMASTER certification track. So in this article I'll break it all down for you. Let's get started. 

There are three separate certifications in the Certified CloudMASTER track. I'll go into detail about each below:

Cloud Technologies:

What the certification covers:

  • This certification is about getting to the cloud. It tests general knowledge of cloud computing terms, technologies, and trends. It also tests on how to address common barriers to cloud computing adoption such as application migration issues, and cultural resistance. This certification also requires knowledge of common security, privacy, and technical concerns, such as vendor lock-in. Things that must be planned for prior to migrating to the cloud. To pass the certification you have to demonstrate that you can evaluate cloud Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions, and implement a number of free, and paid SaaS solutions for business including email, marketing, CRM, and others.  You also need to show detailed knowledge of how to migrate email from on-premises to the cloud, including solution evaluation, migration planning, and execution. You will also be tested on your ability to integrate cloud solutions from multiple vendors. Finally, this exam tests fundamental knowledge and use of Platform as a Service (PaaS), and Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) solutions. 

Get 10% off a CloudMASTER class for 3 or more attendees for a limited time. Click for details.

Who should consider it:

  • This certification is really for any system administrator or IT application support staff with six months to a years worth of experience.

Career and business impact:

  • If you're a system or application admin, this certification is a great step that can help you prove you know and understand the most fundamental issues around migrating to cloud solutions. The associated training class not only prepares you for the certification, but also gives you knowledge of cloud computing trends and issues, and prepares you to define selection criteria for cloud solutions, then evaluate and make selections based on those criteria, while addressing security, privacy, interoperation, and other concerns. That knowledge will help you bring thoughtful insights to any discussion of cloud service adoption. It will help you stand out planning and migration discussions, and point out common pitfalls and potential alternative solutions to the benefit of your organization. The certification will provide proof that you know these topic areas, and that you're on the path to becoming a certified CloudMASTER.  

Cloud Operations:

What the certification covers:

  • This certification is about administering, and orchestrating cloud services across multiple platforms once your organization is in the cloud. It tests skills for provisioning, deploying,  maintaining, and troubleshooting  Platform-as-a-Service (PaaS) and Infrastructure-as-a-Service (IaaS) solutions. This wide ranging exam tests your knowledge of how to implement and manage servers and virtual machines in the cloud. You will also have to show the ability to manage security and compliance in the cloud. The exam tests your knowledge of deploying websites and applications in Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft Azure®, Rackspace Cloud, DigitalOcean®, and Heroku®. You must also demonstrate management and orchestration of cloud services using Opscode Chef and Puppet. Finally, you have to show strong, detailed knowledge of how to plan, and executive a phased cloud migration. 

Everything covered in the exam, is covered the NCTA Cloud Operations course, which provides hands on, active learning, with the platforms and tools tested in the certification!

Who should consider it:

  • This certification is for system administrators who are, or will be managing servers and applications in a cloud computing, or hybrid environment. 

Career and business impact:

This certification proves you've worked with a variety of cloud vendor platforms and services, and are familiar with performing common cloud system and service administration tasks, as well as application deployments on a number of cloud services. Beyond that it shows that you know how to select and use cloud orchestration tools to automate administrative tasks for efficiency and administrative scalability. This certification and class is an excellent fit for any cloud system administrator who wishes to get a broader view and more experience with a broader range of cloud service providers. Passing this certification proves that you've been there, and done that on the platforms, and with the services listed above. That knowledge and experience will help you compare and contrast cloud solutions, and provide valuable input on cloud service provider, and tool selection, as well as post deployment orchestration, and maintenance topics. 

Cloud Architecture:

What the certification covers:

This certification is about designing a cloud architecture to meet business needs, from discovery to design, to presenting the plan to executives or clients. This certification builds off of the previous two, bringing in everything you've learned, and adding the fundamental steps of discovery and analysis to determine technical requirements, barriers, and concerns for moving to the cloud. The certification tests your ability to assemble a team to perform the migration including setting roles, and objectives. The exam tests your ability to assemble the right cloud components to meet those technical requirements and design a scalable solution. In addition, it tests your ability to evaluate service level agreement, determine licensing requirements, and perform cost comparisons. The exam also covers design solutions that provide secure access to information, and that secure data both in transit and at rest, while ensuring business continuity and disaster recovery. The exam also tests your ability to estimate total cost of ownership, and return on investment for cloud solutions. Finally, the exam covers how to prepare a project plan, and how to present it effectively to get sign off from upper management or clients. 

Everything covered in the exam, is covered the NCTA Cloud Architecture course, which provides hands on, active learning, with the platforms and tools tested in the certification!

Who should consider it:

  • This certification is for system administrators who wish to plan, design, and secure cloud computing solutions to meet a variety of application, and organizational requirements. 

Career and business impact:

This certification takes it to the next level,  and proves you can operate independently to evaluate application and organizational IT needs, and design cloud computing solutions to meet those needs. It demonstrates that you have the skills to address security, privacy, business continuity, disaster recover, and vendor lock-in issues in your design and implementation plans. It also proves that you can create a team to facilitate a cloud migration, and distribute tasks to maximize efficiency. Finally, it demonstrates your ability to document, and present cloud solutions to executives which is an invaluable skill for interfacing with "C-suite" personnel in any organization. Either to get cloud solutions approved, or to sell cloud consulting services to clients. The knowledge and skills gained in the training, will help you speak to core elements of the design processes including component comparison, and selection, creating costs comparisons, developing total cost of ownership and return on investment projections. Those skills will help you lead cloud migration teams, and provide consulting support for any organization transitioning to cloud services. 

CloudMASTER certification:

This one's easy. If you pass all three exams you're a certified CloudMASTER!

Want to move fast? Think you're ready to do this now? Aren't afraid of hard work? Consider our NCTA Cloud Bootcamp course. We cover all three courses in two weeks and help you prepare for you certification exams. 

Conclusion

If you want to get started, check out our class schedule to see the full course description, and run dates for all three of the cloudmaster cloud computing classes. If you are unsure about which course you or your team should take, reach out. Depending experience, roles, and responsibilities, different team members make require different classes, or your organization may benefit from a custom class. 

Have Questions? Reach out:

Take a look at the courses linked, and contact us. We'll tell you which course or courses can best meet your organization, and personal needs, and answer any questions you might have. 

 

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CarverTC provides CloudMASTER cloud computing classes and certification preparation in the Portland Oregon area and across North America.