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"After our conversation, I walked away with a clear path forward, greater confidence, and actionable tools to help me enter the offensive security field. I truly appreciated Tadi’s ability to identify areas I hadn’t been fully leveraging and to share insights from his own experiences to guide me in the right direction."
Bryan S
Azure Administrator and SOC Analyst
Does this sound like you?
You don't know which first step to take.
You're torn on whether to chase certifications, if so, which one? OSCP, PNPT?
You have failed a specific certification multiple times.
You have a tonne of credibility, but you're still not landing any interviews.
You feel like no one is hiring.
You've done homelab after homelab, CTF after CTF.
Does this sound like you?
You're torn on whether to chase certifications, if so, which one.
You don't know which first step to take.
You have failed a specific certification multiple times.
You have done homelab after homelab, CTF after CTF.
You have a tonne of credibility, but you're still not landing any interviews.
You feel like no one is hiring.
Mapping out my cybersecurity journey was the most frustrating thing…Until I learned I didn't have to do it the traditional way.
It’s 2021. I had just moved to a new country, involuntarily dropped out of university, knew no one, and I was wondering how I would even begin…
I had started my first year of college doing computer science even though I had initially wanted to do cybersecurity.
But kinda like most things in Africa, being behind meant barely any universities offered any dedicated cybersecurity degrees.
Fast forward moving half way across the world with no plan and no money.
Just a few tryhackme rooms completed, a few hackthebox machines pwned, and no clue what to do next with my life in this new country.
I still wanted to pursue cybersecurity so I sat myself down to create a game plan for this now potentially attainable vision of mine.
I needed to figure out how I’d start, where’d I’d start, and which direction to take, and yet I was uncertain about everything except two things;
I had no money,
I didn’t want to have to go back to college.
I decided to go the certification route, so I got myself a job at a grocery store to fund my studies, worked 8 hours a day, and came back home to study at night
Within a month, I had my first certification, the eJPT.
I remember the feeling of passing, I was elated and excited about the future.
I added it to my resume and started sending out applications, confident I would land an entry level role.
It’s 2021. I had just moved to a new country, involuntarily dropped out of university, knew no one, and I was wondering how I would even begin…
I had started my first year of college doing computer science even though I had initially wanted to do cybersecurity.
But kinda like most things in Africa, being behind meant barely any universities offered any dedicated cybersecurity degrees.
Fast forward moving half way across the world with no plan and no money.
Just a few tryhackme rooms completed, a few hackthebox machines pwned, and no clue what to do next with my life in this new country.
I still wanted to pursue cybersecurity so I sat myself down to create a game plan for this now potentially attainable vision of mine.
I needed to figure out how I’d start, where’d I’d start, and which direction to take, and yet I was uncertain about everything except two things;
I had no money,
I didn’t want to have to go back to college.
I decided to go the certification route, so I got myself a job at a grocery store to fund my studies, worked 8 hours a day, and came back home to study at night
Within a month, I had my first certification, the eJPT.
I remember the feeling of passing, I was elated and excited about the future.
I added it to my resume and started sending out applications, confident I would land an entry level role.
It’s 2021. I had just moved to a new country, involuntarily dropped out of university, knew no one, and I was wondering how I would even begin…
I had started my first year of college doing computer science even though I had initially wanted to do cybersecurity.
But kinda like most things in Africa, being behind meant barely any universities offered any dedicated cybersecurity degrees.
Fast forward moving half way across the world with no plan and no money.
Just a few tryhackme rooms completed, a few hackthebox machines pwned, and no clue what to do next with my life in this new country.
I still wanted to pursue cybersecurity so I sat myself down to create a game plan for this now potentially attainable vision of mine.
I needed to figure out how I’d start, where’d I’d start, and which direction to take, and yet I was uncertain about everything except two things;
I had no money,
I didn’t want to have to go back to college.
I decided to go the certification route, so I got myself a job at a grocery store to fund my studies, worked 8 hours a day, and came back home to study at night
Within a month, I had my first certification, the eJPT.
I remember the feeling of passing, I was elated and excited about the future.
I added it to my resume and started sending out applications, confident I would land an entry level role.