IT certifications take a turn for the practical
IT certifications are undergoing a structural shift from testing what candidates can remember to validating what they can actually do in realistic environments. Certification vendors, employers, and professionals are converging on skills based, hands on assessments that better reflect modern IT and AI driven work, increasing both the credibility of credentials and their impact on hiring, promotion, and compensation.
Across the industry, traditional multiple choice exams are giving way to performance based questions, simulations, virtual labs, and scenario driven evaluations that mirror how work is truly performed, with access to tools, resources, and AI copilots rather than isolated recall of definitions. Employers, facing persistent skills gaps in areas like AI and machine learning and struggling to find qualified talent, are investing heavily in upskilling and reskilling, and they increasingly prefer credentials that demonstrate applied capability over mere familiarity with a body of knowledge. For candidates, this shift raises the bar but also creates a more meaningful way to showcase technical and soft skills such as critical thinking, adaptability, and communication.
Examples from leading vendors illustrate this turning point. Providers like CompTIA are embedding performance based simulations and virtual environments directly into core exams, while SAP is overhauling its certification model to focus on configuring systems, troubleshooting issues, building solutions, and solving open book, real world scenarios with modern tools and AI assistants. These changes align certification with contemporary practice: demonstrating how professionals work, collaborate, and solve problems in live environments, rather than how well they can take a test.