My insight : Moving from CCNA to CCNP can feel like a big jump. But here’s the truth: it’s not about more commands. It’s about understanding bigger networks and how data flows in them.  

 


 

1️. Why CCNP ENCOR Routing & Switching is Important

Many learners think:

“CCNP is just harder than CCNA.”

It’s more than that. ENCOR teaches you:

  • How large networks really work
  • How to make networks fast, reliable, and stable
  • How to solve real network problems

Insight : Don’t focus on memorizing commands. Focus on why traffic goes one way, not another. That’s what makes you a strong engineer.

 


 

2️. Main Topics You’ll Learn

Here’s what you’ll work on:

Topic

What It Means in Real Life

What You Do in Labs

OSPF & EIGRP

Routing between big networks

Multi-area OSPF, route summarization

BGP

Internet and branch connectivity

eBGP/iBGP, route filtering

IPv6 Routing

Modern networks use IPv6

Dual-stack setups, static IPv6

Layer 2 Switching

VLANs and switch redundancy

STP, RSTP, EtherChannel

Redundancy

Networks must stay online

HSRP, VRRP, GLBP setups

Route Redistribution

Multiple protocols together

Move routes safely between protocols

Troubleshooting

Fixing network issues

Ping, traceroute, show/debug commands

 Insight: Labs are useful, but real understanding comes from visualizing traffic across multiple devices

 


 

3️. Real-World Problems

Even if everything is “correct,” networks can fail. Some common reasons:

  • Duplex mismatch (speed/flow mismatch between devices)
  • BGP or OSPF misconfiguration
  • ACLs blocking traffic
  • Wrong HSRP priorities

Note :  Always ask:

“Where is the traffic stopping, and why?”

 


 

4️. Lab vs Real Network

  • Packet Tracer / GNS3 – Great for learning and practicing commands
  • Real network – Devices, traffic, latency, and failures happen at the same time

Note :  Never assume:

“If it works in my lab, it will work in production.”

 


 

5️. How Interviewers Check You

In CCNP interviews, it’s not about commands only. They watch:

  • How you explain your thinking
  • How you approach a problem
  • If you understand traffic flow, not just syntax

Example Question in Interview :

Typical Troubleshooting Flow in Real Networks (Production)

When a branch office cannot reach HQ, network engineers usually follow a layered approach, from simple to complex. This is called “divide and conquer”

 


 

1. Physical Layer & Connectivity (Layer 1 & 2)

  • What is checked: Cables, switch ports, link lights, VLANs, and physical connectivity.
  • Why: If the physical layer is down, nothing else matters.
  • Tools: Ping, traceroute, “show interface” on routers/switches.
  • Example: Sometimes a fiber link is down, or a switch port is administratively down.

 This is why in our beginner flow, ping/traceroute comes first. It quickly tells you if the network is reachable at all.

 


 

2. IP & Routing (Layer 3)

  • What is checked: Routing tables, routing protocols (OSPF/EIGRP/BGP), subnets, next hops.
  • Why: Even if the physical link is fine, traffic won’t flow if routers don’t know the path.
  • Tools: show ip route, show ip ospf neighbor, show ip bgp summary.
  • Example: A BGP session may be down, or OSPF may have the wrong network advertised.

This aligns with our “check routing tables and protocols” step.

 


 

3. Redundancy / High Availability

  • What is checked: HSRP, VRRP, GLBP status, backup links.
  • Why: Production networks often have redundant paths. If failover didn’t happen, traffic may stop even though the primary device looks fine.
  • Tools: show standby, show vrrp, ping over backup path.
  • Example: Primary router fails but secondary doesn’t take over due to misconfigured priority.

 This matches “check redundancy and failover.”

 


 

4. Security / Policy Layer (ACLs & Firewalls)

  • What is checked: Access control lists, firewall rules, NAT policies, IPS/IDS.
  • Why: Traffic can be blocked intentionally or accidentally, even if routing is perfect.
  • Tools: show access-lists, firewall logs, packet captures (Wireshark/tcpdump).
  • Example: ACL blocks branch IPs from accessing HQ servers; firewall is misconfigured.

 This is why “consider ACLs/firewall rules” comes last.

 


 

5.Optional: Application Layer Checks (Layer 7)

  • What is checked: DNS, proxy servers, web apps, mail servers.
  • Why: Sometimes the network is fine, but the service itself is down.
  • Example: Ping works but a web page doesn’t load because DNS is misconfigured.

Key Points About Real-World Production Practice

  1. Engineers work top-down AND bottom-up depending on symptoms.
    • If ping fails → start from physical/routing.
    • If ping works but the app fails → check firewalls or services.
  2. They use monitoring & automation first.
    • Network engineers rarely start blindly. They check dashboards, SNMP alerts, NetFlow, or log systems to narrow the problem.
  3. Step-by-step is critical.
    • Skipping steps wastes time.
    • Layered troubleshooting prevents guessing.

 


 

6️. How to Study the Right Way

 Approach:

  1. Visualize the network before configuring anything
  2. Practice small labs one topic at a time
  3. Ask why every time you see output
  4. Connect topics together — don’t study in isolation
  5. Practice troubleshooting — simulate problems and solve them

CCNP ENCOR is not just a certificate. It’s the foundation to work confidently in big networks.

 


 

Final Thoughts :

Learners who succeed are not the ones who memorize commands. They are the ones who:

  • Understand traffic flow
  • Know how networks stay online
  • Can troubleshoot problems in real networks

Focus on concepts and real behavior, not just exams. That’s what makes a production-ready network engineer.

If this way of thinking resonates with you, and you want CCNP Routing & Switching / ENCOR explained the way it actually works in large enterprise networks — with guided labs, real-world scenarios, and a trainer who focuses on understanding, not memorization — you are on the right path.

 Explore our CCNP Corporate Training Program

 

Mokshita Shetty

Corporate Trainer
Cisco Certified Systems Instructor (CCSI #35995)
CCNA | CCNP (R&S) | CCIE Written (R&S)
Helping learners build confidence through concepts, flow, and real-world thinking