RE: CCIE Company registration [bcc][faked-from]

From: marvin greenlee (marvin@ccbootcamp.com)
Date: Thu Mar 24 2005 - 18:40:16 GMT-3


If a partner tries to add a CCIE, the system will tell them if that number
is already being used by another partner. You could probably ask Cisco
directly as well.

Marvin Greenlee, CCIE#12237, CCSI# 30483
Network Learning Inc
marvin@ccbootcamp.com
www.ccbootcamp.com (Cisco Training)

-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Richard Dumoulin
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2005 1:14 PM
To: Jay Hennigan; Sean C
Cc: Lee Gillespie; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: RE: CCIE Company registration [bcc][faked-from]
Importance: Low

Is there a way to know if a company is using one's number apart from asking
the employer?

-- Richard

-----Original Message-----
From: Jay Hennigan [mailto:jay@west.net]
Sent: Thursday, March 24, 2005 9:36 PM
To: Sean C
Cc: Lee Gillespie; ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: Re: CCIE Company registration

On Thu, 24 Mar 2005, Sean C wrote:

> Just to expand this a little because I may be in a similar situation (IF I
> ever pass the lab), the way I understand it, the current company has to
show
> that they paid for your training as well as your lab in order to claim
your
> number. If you can prove that you sponsored your own training (ie - paid
> for any classes and/or books) and paid for passed and also including any
> failed lab attempts, then your current company can't use your number for
> their partnership requirements. Again, I'm admittedly ignorant on this
> subject but am curious myself.

I have not seen this in any of Cisco's documentation. My understanding
of the rules based on past emails (it's been a while) is that if your
CCIE number is being used by a Cisco partner for qualification requirements
and you leave, the old partner has six months to replace you without losing
their status, and the new partner can't use your number in their CCIE count
for some time (six months? a year?) unless the old partner "releases" it.

I have never seen anything from Cisco that addresses the issue of who
paid for the training and lab attempt(s). Some employment contracts may
cover that type of thing, if the employer wants to ensure that they don't
pay for your training only to have you jump ship, bit I don't think Cisco
wants to know or cares. They would be smart not to, as it would be very
likely to generate into a he-said-she-said type of thing.

--
Jay Hennigan - CCIE #7880 - Network Administration - jay@west.net
WestNet:  Connecting you to the planet.  805 884-6323      WB6RDV
NetLojix Communications, Inc.  -  http://www.netlojix.com/


This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.4 : Sun Apr 03 2005 - 17:56:51 GMT-3