Sponsored By

Get SIP Certified for SuccessGet SIP Certified for Success

More than 5,000 IT professionals already hold SIP certification from The SIP School.

Gary Audin

June 17, 2016

3 Min Read
No Jitter logo in a gray background | No Jitter

More than 5,000 IT professionals already hold SIP certification from The SIP School.

SIP has become the most important protocol in voice and unified communications today for handsets, PBX systems, and gateways, while enterprises and service providers continue displacing traditional digital and analog lines with SIP trunks. You cannot move into the future without SIP knowledge.

For many IT professionals working in communications, that begs the question: Do I need a SIP certification?

Based on results of SIP School's SIP Survey 2015 survey, industry sentiment would seem to make "yes," the answer. When asked about the importance of SIP certification, an overwhelming number of respondents signaled its importance to them, as shown below.

The SIP School offers SIP training as well as a globally recognized vendor-neutral SIP certification. More than 18,000 students have gone through The SIP School training, which has the support of prominent manufacturers and organizations in the telecom industry. The Telecommunications Industry Association, for example, has given its official endorsement of The SIP School for SIP training and certification."

Through The SIP School, SIP certification involves a series of online SIP training modules that cover everything from the basics of the protocol to its use with and in firewalls/network address translators, session border controllers, trunking, security, the cloud, mobile, UC and more. Course details, including class outlines and demos, are available at The SIP School here.

Once candidates have completed the modules, they take an extensive online test meant to assess their understanding of SIP and its application.

"The SIP training program is specifically designed not only to educate students on SIP but teach them how to work with confidence in situations that may be completely new to them including troubleshooting SIP implementation problems," explained Graham Francis, CEO of The SIP School.

That said, networking professionals who already have SIP knowledge can take the certification exam without having worked through the SIP training modules. In either case, the SIP School Certified Associate (SSCA) certification is acknowledgement that the recipient can work effectively in SIP environments with VoIP, video, UC and collaboration.

As further testament to the importance of SIP certification, the organization recently awarded its 5,000th SSCA certification. The recipient, Mike Utley, is a senior consultant for corporate sales training with Level 3 Communications.

"We find value in the knowledge The SIP School provides in a vendor-neutral certification to further the development of our students' VoIP skills. We started over 5 years ago using this program and it's been well worth the investment in our people," he said.

Verbatim responses to The SIP School's SIP Survey 2015 question on SIP certification echoed the sentiment. The SSCA reflects a "proven familiarity and knowledge of SIP on the part of the individual engineer," noted respondent Joe Alice, of Verizon. And Hussain Ali, of Cisco, agreed: "Certification is highly desirable."

For more on SIP, read my earlier No Jitter posts:

About the Author

Gary Audin

Gary Audin is the President of Delphi, Inc. He has more than 40 years of computer, communications and security experience. He has planned, designed, specified, implemented and operated data, LAN and telephone networks. These have included local area, national and international networks as well as VoIP and IP convergent networks in the U.S., Canada, Europe, Australia, Asia and Caribbean. He has advised domestic and international venture capital and investment bankers in communications, VoIP, and microprocessor technologies.

For 30+ years, Gary has been an independent communications and security consultant. Beginning his career in the USAF as an R&D officer in military intelligence and data communications, Gary was decorated for his accomplishments in these areas.

Mr. Audin has been published extensively in the Business Communications Review, ACUTA Journal, Computer Weekly, Telecom Reseller, Data Communications Magazine, Infosystems, Computerworld, Computer Business News, Auerbach Publications and other magazines. He has been Keynote speaker at many user conferences and delivered many webcasts on VoIP and IP communications technologies from 2004 through 2009. He is a founder of the ANSI X.9 committee, a senior member of the IEEE, and is on the steering committee for the VoiceCon conference. Most of his articles can be found on www.webtorials.com and www.acuta.org. In addition to www.nojitter.com, he publishes technical tips at www.Searchvoip.com.