H.I.G. Capital and Thoma Bravo to Acquire CompTIA Brand and Products

I heard this too but truth be told I was standing next to Rick at the time.
I think it depends on the content.

Some content producers focus on creating shorter, certification-focused content and study aids such as practice questions. Those will directly compete with CertMaster and CompTIA training materials.

However, larger publishers (e.g., Wiley/Sybex, McGraw Hill, Pearson, Cengage) create academic-focused content that focus on the educational needs of a course and program first and foremost, but will also cover the objectives on an associated CompTIA certification exam as an added student benefit. These products don't directly compete with CertMaster and CompTIA training materials. And if the new CompTIA wants to shift direction to do so, they've got some steep competition in that area - in that case, it would be wise to strike an authoring agreement with a major publisher.

Disclaimer: I'm an author of several books related to certification. And I can confidently say that the publishers I've written for have never regarded CertMaster and CompTIA training materials as competing products.
 
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Disclaimer: I'm an author of several books related to certification. And I can confidently say that the publishers I've written for have never regarded CertMaster and CompTIA training materials as competing products.
I guess that's fitting then. I've never regarded CompTIA study guides as products I'd recommend to self-studying students, over study guides from those aforementioned bodies.

Speaking of AI, AI, AI and more AI...

Weren't we supposed to get all kinds of announcements and new products around July?

https://cin.comptia.org/threads/ai-essentials-and-ai-expansions.1928/
https://cin.comptia.org/threads/comptia-ai-add-ons.1886/
 
I guess that's fitting then. I've never regarded CompTIA study guides as products I'd recommend to self-studying students, over study guides from those aforementioned bodies.

Speaking of AI, AI, AI and more AI...

Weren't we supposed to get all kinds of announcements and new products around July?

https://cin.comptia.org/threads/ai-essentials-and-ai-expansions.1928/
My prediction is that everything that's not ready to go live will be canceled. I took the CloudNetX beta August 9. That might be the last new certification after SecurityX goes live.
 
In Africa, we are watching this CompTIA operation with concern. If this operation leads to a search for money, it means that the costs of content and certifications will increase. Our learners in Africa often have difficulty accessing official content, which pushes them to violate copyrights by accessing CompTIA content illegally. This parallel market impacts us instructors who want to remain legal. So I hope that this operation will not further degrade the recognition of CompTIA content and certifications.
 
All of this reminds me just how lucky I am, having reached a point where I'm retired (from a monetary perspective), and my current involvement is in the form of serving as a "volunteer" instructor in situations where I see value in my participation. As to content authoring, given the limited shelf life of technology-related books because of rapid technology changes, I abandoned those efforts before the turn of the century because of the low compensation for the workload.
 
I am confused by how they are splitting in the two groups. Are the certifications still going to be in CompTIA or profit? It looks like training stuff will go in profit and essentially sounds like TTT and CIN will be gone. I think this ruins value of name.
It's in the press release, how they are splitting.

All training activities, all certification activities, are moved into the non-profit. The name "CompTIA" also moves along with those activities to the for-profit.

What is left is "not-CompTIA-anymore" with all the lobbying and the trade association activities.

What happens with CIN and TTT is fully up to the new owners and the board who work for them.