Bonus points for your thoughts in the below situations:
1. You pay 100% of the cert price out of pocket.
2. Your employer matches 30% of the price (you pay the other 70% yourself).
Are they worth it in terms of forcing you to study and learn a broad swath of an important technology ecosystem? Well, would you do it without the cert? You might, but having a test to study for helps focus my efforts. This is the source of most of the value for the associate certs, in my experience. AWS is so sprawling, so even knowing that something exists is valuable. And studying for a cert can force you to learn that.
Are they a differentiator for you? Depends on your experience level, the job type, and the competition.
Context: I taught AWS courses for a while a few years back and held 4 certs at one time. Now I just have one (Solutions Architect, Associate), that I've renewed a couple of times.
I've never cared about certs when hiring and have never really had it come up or be a big deal when interviewing - it's only ever gotten the attention of recruiters or old school companies that I never really had an interest in to begin with. The real purpose of the certs is for consultancies to say "we have x number of AWS certified engineers available for your task" and then depending on the number of certs associated with that entity, AWS will send them more/bigger leads.
I'd take the time you would spend cramming for the cert and study pretty much anything else that interested you and take the money and buy yourself a nice bottle of wine or a fancy dinner.
After that, I founded a startup that didn't go well and I'm planning to return to the market in the next months (as swe or devops/sre) and in my preparation plan is, besides other things (practice algorithm, systems design...), take some certs:
- SOA-C02 - AWS SysOps Administrator - Associate (passed last month)
- DOP-C01 - AWS DevOps Engineer - Professional (exam in December)
- CKA - Certified Kubernetes Administrator (Jan/Feb?)
All out of my pocket. I don't think this makes a huge technical difference, but it open doors, the process is great to learn and I also want to be prepared for future interviews, maybe a MANGA/FAANG? :)
A nice undergrad and previous experience at interesting companies is a much better signal.
If you do not use AWS daily and it's not something that you feel you're lacking, it may be a bit overwhelming.
I used the Solutions Architect Assoc. as a stepping stone to get out of web dev. It was a slow process but it set the wheels in motion and I no longer do web dev. I'm currently studying for the DevOps Pro but not in a huge rush.
So getting one is a signal that you have something to prove.
That said, it's good for juniors who really do have something to prove.
And consultancies like to show lists of certifications of their employees.
If the company doesn't pay for it, I wouldn't do it.
I took a few networking and quantum computation classes on coursera and they were really good.