New Certifications Ask Architects To Show Their Credentials

Programs from Microsoft and Open Group aim to set industry standards for distinguishing the skills and experience levels of tech architects.

July 12, 2006

2 Min Read
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Calling yourself a technology architect soon may not be good enough. New professional certification programs from Microsoft and Open Group aim to set industry standards for distinguishing the skills and experience levels of professional technology architects.

This move toward professional certification is welcome at Hewlett-Packard, says Tony Redmond, chief technology officer of HP Services. In fact, HP, a member of the vendor-neutral consortium Open Group, plans to encourage its team of 1,000 architects in its services organizations to get certified over the next few years.

Already, nine HP architects have earned their Microsoft Certified Architect status as Microsoft in the last month began bringing its new certification program out of the pilot phase. HP is also working with Open Group to bring that organization's certification program to its architects as well.

"We are saying to our people: Show us, prove to us, show personal development," says Redmond, who expects the architect certification status to become a competitive advantage in coming years as HP competes against other vendors also offering IT services. "We ask our other professionals to get appropriate certification, and up to now this wasn't an option for architects," he says.

Until now, the skills and experience required of the estimated 100,000 U.S. professionals who call themselves IT architects, enterprise architects, infrastructure architects, solutions architects, operations architects, and others haven't been clear. These new certifications, which require an individual to undergo testing and/or review by a board, help define an individual's skills, experience, and other attributes, Redmond says.The first certifications available from Open Group are IT and enterprise architects. "Open Group is attempting to put the structure in place, its toe in the water," says Redmond.

The main difference so far between the certifications offered by Microsoft and Open Group is philosophy, not so much the actual technologies. In fact, Microsoft's certification isn't fixated on Microsoft products.

Open Group's certification is available to architects who have a more academic role such as establishing best practices and methodologies at a company, things that a chief enterprise architect might be responsible for. By contrast, Microsoft's program is aimed more at the hands-on, practicing architect.

It's not easy or inexpensive to become certified. For instance, candidates for the Microsoft Certified Architect program pay $10,000 and can face a review board that might spend two hours or more asking questions to evaluate the individual's understanding of technology.

Still, HP plans on picking up the tab for its architects to be certified, just as it pays for the professional accreditation of its other employees. "It's the cost of doing business," Redmond says.Certification for technology architects today is where project management credentials were 10 years ago. "The project management market had a similar lack of qualifications 10 years ago, but now those certifications are valuable and command higher salaries," Redmond says. He expects architect certifications to carry the same weight in the job market in five or 10 years.

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