Certifications help when they match a role and are backed by proof — not as a scoreboard.
The problem
Beginners are told certifications are the key to IT, so they buy the most popular one, pass it, and are surprised when interviews still go badly. A certificate proves you can pass an exam; it does not, on its own, prove you can do the job.
Why this matters now
Certifications remain useful signals, and official providers like CompTIA, Microsoft, AWS, Cisco and Google keep their exam objectives public and current. But as AI makes it easier to grind practice questions, employers lean harder on whether you can actually apply the knowledge. The value of a certificate is increasingly in what you can demonstrate alongside it.









