Should you be considering getting into the web design industry, an Adobe Dreamweaver course is essential for getting professional credentials that are recognised around the world.

For professional applications you will require an in-depth and thorough understanding of the full Adobe Web Creative Suite. This is including (though it’s not limited to) Action Script and Flash. If you wish to become an Adobe Certified Expert (ACE) or Adobe Certified Professional (ACP) then these skills are paramount.

To establish yourself as a full web professional however, you’ll have to get more diverse knowledge. You’ll need to study various programming essentials like PHP, HTML, and MySQL. A working knowledge of SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) and E-Commerce will help when talking to employers.

Beware of putting too much emphasis, as many people do, on the accreditation program. You’re not training for the sake of training; this is about employment. Focus on the end-goal.

It’s common, in many cases, to obtain tremendous satisfaction from a year of studying only to end up putting 20 long years into a job you hate, as an upshot of not doing some decent due-diligence at the outset.

It’s essential to keep your focus on what you want to achieve, and then build your training requirements around that – don’t do it the other way round. Stay on target and ensure that you’re training for a career you’ll still be enjoying many years from now.

Seek guidance and advice from an experienced professional, even if there’s a fee involved – it’s considerably cheaper and safer to find out at the start whether a chosen track will suit, instead of discovering after two full years that you aren’t going to enjoy the job you’ve chosen and have to start from the beginning again.

Workshop days are often sold as a major benefit by many training schools. When you talk to most IT trainees who have used them, you’ll likely realise that they’ve now become a mistake due to many reasons:

* Many back and forth visits – usually hundreds of miles each and every time.

* If you work for a living, then Mon-Fri events are difficult to make. You’re usually having to deal with several days in a row too.

* At only 4 weeks off each year, using half of that on training workshops leaves us with very few opportunities for days off.

* With the high costs involved, a lot of schools have to put on larger classes – which is not ideal (increasing the ratio of students to teachers).

* Tension can run high in mixed classes because most students want to move at a pace comfortable for them.

* Add up the cost of all the travel, fares, parking, food and accommodation and you may be surprised (and not pleasantly). Attendees mention extra costs ranging from hundreds to over a thousand pounds. Sit down and add it up – then you’ll know.

* Do you really want the chance of letting yourself be ignored for potential advancement or wage increases just because you’re retraining.

* Asking questions around our class-mates will often make us feel uncomfortable. Have you ever left a question un-asked because you didn’t want to appear stupid?

* There are those of us who at times work or live away part of the time, think of the now-increased trouble of reaching the necessary classes, as time becomes even more scarce.

Doesn’t it make so much more sense to study when it’s convenient for you – not the company – and utilise interactive videos of instructors teaching a class.

If anything comes up, get onto the live 24×7 support (that should’ve been packaged with any technical type of training.) Bear in mind, if you have a laptop, you can study wherever you want.

It doesn’t matter how often you feel you need to repeat something, filmed instructors will never get annoyed or frustrated! And don’t forget, in this situation, you can say goodbye to note-taking. It’s all there for immediate use.

What could be more straightforward: Time and money is saved and travelling is avoided altogether; and of course you end up with a more comfortable study environment.

(C) S. Edwards 2009. Try Click HERE or Dreamweaver Training.