When I landed my first internship at Nokia, I found that the experience varies depending on the position that you are looking at. One thing that is consistent throughout all positions is finding people with a drive to learn. Showing that you are willing to go above and beyond, networking with others, and bringing a positive attitude honestly matters more than exactly what technical skills you know, as those can be learnt during an Internship!
Some of the skills that some of the employers would be looking for would be as follows though:
Networking: IP routing/switching, Linux, Python, automation basics.
Cloud: Containers/Kubernetes, CI/CD, YAML, observability; Cloud RAN concepts.
Certs (nice-to-have): Nokia Bell Labs 5G Associate, vendor-neutral cloud (e.g., k8s fundamentals), and basic security. Nokia 5G Foundation
You can also look into the NRS 1 certification from Nokia: Nokia Certified Network Routing Specialist I (NRS I) | Nokia.com
For Network Infrastructure, focus on:
For Cloud and Software roles, build skills around:
For AI and observability/automation, explore:
For Network Infrastructure, focus on:
For Cloud and Software roles, build skills around:
For AI and observability/automation, explore:
Thank you for your apply! That’s really helpful! Are there any recommended learning resources or certification paths (like Nokia’s own courses or labs) for students to get hands-on experience with these technologies?
Also I'm interested in Cloud platforms like AWS or Azure, what’s a good learning path to build a strong foundation before applying to Nokia? How to start for a beginner?
Nokia actually offers its own industry-recognized certification programs and open learning resources that are perfect for students:
Many opensource technologies you can look at also
Most of our deployments are on baremetal, Openstack and Openshift, since thats what customers use on premise. However, AWS/Azure/GCP experience is directly related and transferable
Thanks a lot for explaining this so clearly! The NRC program and the learning paths you mentioned sound really helpful for students like me.
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