Roy, I don't think anyone doubts your experience or how extensive it was before you got into SAP, but not everyone or anyone can even start to mimic that to get into SAP. I agree with you totally on the benefits of a consultant having deep domain experience to be able to add business value to projects, however I also think for anyone starting out in SAP learn your domain with a zero footprint and map this to your module of choice work hard at it and you'll find that your solutions will be vendor neutral and more valuable. Sent from my BlackBerry? smartphone on O2
| | | ---------------Original Message--------------- From: Roy Brookes Sent: Thursday, September 08, 2011 6:19 AM Subject: Regarding SAP FICO I was never a fresher in the sense that you mean. I had been an international accountant for many years before I got into SAP (I mean nearly 30 years) and I knew all this terminology and much more because I had been working in the fields of accounting and finance for so long. Therefore I had no problem in absorbing SAP as just another tool and I could talk to an accounts clerk or a finance director each on their own level. I was not sitting around moaning that nobody would give me a job like so many "freshers" do, because I was well-qualified for the job by experience. Rgds, Roy ----- Urspr?ngliche Nachricht ----- Von: email@removed An:"Roy B" Cc: Gesendet:Thu, 8 Sep 2011 14:19:28 +0530 Betreff:Re: [sap-career] Regarding SAP FICO [1] Posted by PDGR2 [2] on Sep 8 at 4:51 AM Well Mr Roy what you are saying is correct...but even a day was there when even you were new in this field ie., a fresher what did you do that time....even you were new to all these terminology...please share some of your experience as a fresher. | | __.____._ Copyright © 2011 Toolbox.com and message author. Toolbox.com 4343 N. Scottsdale Road Suite 280, Scottsdale, AZ 85251 | | Popular White Papers In the Spotlight _.____.__ |
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