Last week, I had a chat with Fred Weiller, Director of Cisco Marketing, who gave me a sneak preview of the new "CCIE Emeritus" certification status Cisco announced today. CCIE Emeritus was developed in response to very experienced CCIEs who wish to keep their CCIE status, but are not interested in biennial recertification exams anymore.
CCIE Emeritus comes with three restrictions:
Those are the main restrictions.
The Emeritus program is open to CCIEs who have been current and active for 10 years. I passed 8 years ago in May 2003, CCIE #11733. So, I'm going to guess, at this point, that would be CCIEs below #9000. There is an application process to go through along with an $85 charge. CCIE Emeriti must re-apply each year submitting what they have done to stay active in the networking industry. Speaking with Fred, this would be networking projects, management of networking organizations, consulting, blogging, publishing, etc. Essentially, you still have to work in networking.
Once accepted, there are no more recertification written exams to take every 2 years. However, should you want to reactivate your CCIE to full status, you simply need to pass a written exam again, no lab exam needed. However, if you are already an inactive CCIE, there is no backdoor to the Emeritus program; you poor guys and gals have to retake the lab exam.
Cisco's impetus for this new status category was feedback from the CCIE community. Cisco polled and listened to their most important advocates (the CCIEs) and developed a program to meet their needs. A quick Google search for CCIE Emeritus turned up a 2006 CCIE Customer Feedback survey that mentions the need for an Emeritus status:
In summary, I think this is good. It recognizes that a lot of people, 10 years after passing the CCIE, have probably moved into different roles and do not have the time or the incentive to take written exams every two years, but still don't want to lose something they worked very hard for. Good for Cisco. This is a fine idea.
More >From the Field blog entries:
The CCIE Party at Networkers Has Big Potential This Year
The New Cisco Nexus 2232PP Is Nice!
Layer-0 Page for Network Design Templates
Nexus 5000 Only Supports 16 EtherChannels
A Graphical View of My Idea of WAN Acceleration and More Bandwidth
I Have Been Disillusioned by WAN Acceleration
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Michael Morris is a communications engineering manager at a $3-billion high-tech company. His background is in enterprise WANs working with telcos and developing large-scale routing designs. He has worked on networks at government and corporate organizations, including networks at two Fortune 10 companies. In his current role, he leads a team of 10 engineers responsible for large-scale IT networking projects and architectural standards for data networks, storage area networks, IP telephony, contact centers, and security. Michael is CCIE #11733 and recently became one of the first three Cisco Certified Design Experts (CCDE) ever (#20080002). He has 11 years experience in networking and communications, including four years as a paratrooper in the U.S. Army. He has a bachelor's degree in MIS from the University at Buffalo and is working on his MBA from NC State University. In 2008, he was awarded the Network Professional Association (NPA) Professional Excellence and Innovation Award for his work on network architecture, templates and enterprise MPLS design.
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