

“It’s been great to see, and I think we will continue to see that growth over the next five to ten years,” added the COO. We are OK utilising online training, because we feel it’s effective.’”

“In the last two years, we’ve had a lot more conversations with large corporate and university clients, saying ‘hey, we don’t want to always send people out to go to these seminars, we don’t always want to pay for someone to come in. There’s a lot of chaos in the world that we live in, and this way, they get results. “People log in, learn what they want to learn, do it at their own pace in their own time. “What it’s really come down to, in my opinion, is flexibility,” he told TechWeekEurope. Lee believes that the corporate training market, worth approximately $62 billion, is rapidly moving online. Keith Barker, a CBT Nuggets instructor with 27 years of experience in IT, says seven days offers plenty of time to complete one of the training pathways and prepare for certification tests.įor example, someone with basic understanding of networking could use this opportunity to train towards CCNA (Cisco Certified Network Associate) or CCSA (Checkpoint Certified System Administrator), without paying a penny.

He welcomes the fact that it has become fashionable to learn code, but says we shouldn’t forget about other skills in demand across the IT industry.ĬBT Nuggets is a US training provider that publishes online videos covering a variety of IT, project management and office productivity topics.įrom today, the firm is launching a free trial that gives potential customers unlimited access to all online courses for a whole week. IT professionals can trust online video courses to improve their qualifications and even launch their career in a different direction, says Ryan Lee, COO at CBT Nuggets.
