I will try and answer a few frequently asked questions on making an entry (and a Career) in SAP as a Functional Consultant in India . The answers are based on my observations of the Indian SAP scene over the last 8 years, and not backed by any research. This is a personal opinion and not necessarily shared or endorsed by my employer.
Question: I am a professional with X years (from Nil to 15 or more) years of industry experience and want to make a career as an SAP Consultant. Will an SAP certification guarantee me a position as an SAP consultant in a company ?
Answer: The simple answer is NO. An SAP Certification will NOT guarantee a job. While the agencies ( SAP and its authorized education partners) selling the Certification training often make tall claims of “placement assistance” and 100 % placement, this is merely sales talk. Once you have enrolled and paid the fees, they do no more than act as a post office. If you are lucky there might be some company looking for SAP certified freshers around the time you complete Certification and the company might contact the training agency, who will then refer you. My estimate is that less than 20% Certified freshers get placed through the training agency, and this tells me that the training agencies are really NOT doing any great deal of concept selling to prospective / potential employers of Certified SAP Consultants.
(If anyone from SAP or an Authorised training agency is reading this and would like to dispute my estimate, I would only be too happy to be corrected)
Question: So is certification of any use?
Answer: This one is not so simple to answer. First, please bear in mind that while there is strong demand for SAP Consultants, very few IT large companies (in fact not more than 2 or 3) take Freshers, Certified or non-certified. The problem is that while IT companies have large programs for Graduate / Entry level hiring of BE/ BTech/ MCA, when it comes to SAP Functional consultants, everyone wants consultants with experience. So how do you get experienced consultants if there are no openings for freshers ? It’s a classic chicken and egg story, to which the IT companies by and large have either not found a proper answer or do not want to find an answer. The current solution seems to be to take experienced people from other companies and sometimes through the contact hire route. I will write more about the contract hire issue later in this note.
So the Certification has a very limited utility. In cases where companies take freshers, SAP Certification might carry some weight, but is, as I said before, not a guarantee for a job. A certification may sometimes be specified as minimum eligibility criteria in selection of freshers, but this is extremely rare. I am not aware of any large scale recruitment where certification was used as the only screening criteria. At best, with a certification , you have a slightly better chance of being short-listed/ selected than another person with an identical profile but no certification.
Typically, companies look for
Also keep in mind, that once a person has acquired some experience as an SAP consultant (say 3 plus years) , the value of certification becomes almost NIL. There was a time (say 2007 or before) when some clients insisted that Consultants should be certified, but those days are over.
Question: So if the industry is looking for experienced consultants and not taking freshers, how is the total pool of SAP consultants growing?
Answer: There are several streams from where the IT industry gets consultants to add to the total pool
Question: So keeping in mind all the above, should I do a Certification ?
Answer : My advice would be NO. Unless of course if you have Rs 3.50 lacs to spare and take a risk, go ahead.
Question: I am thinking quitting my job and doing SAP training. Should I quit.
Answer: ABSOLUTELY NO !!!! Find a method to gettraining while continuing in the job.
Question: So how do I make a career as an SAP consultant?
Answer: As I pointed out earlier there are multiple streams.
As I said at the beginning, this is my personal opinion based on observation. No research has gone into it. I would welcome comments, corrections and criticism.
Finally a bit of advice to aspirants. Please improve your English communication skills. Even if you have certification you will get rejected if communication skills are poor. My observation is that 50 % of certified candidates do not have adequate communication skills. You have spent or are planning to send money on SAP training …at best SAP knowledge has a shelf life of 10 years. So consider spending money on communication skills, they last a lifetime.