Beyond the Viral Moment
Following a recent viral TikTok post by Seramphuti, renewed attention has been drawn to short courses and specialized technical careers, including high-demand fields like vibration monitoring. The video sparked widespread conversation around opportunities in high-skill trades—sectors that often operate outside the mainstream spotlight yet play a critical role in global industrial reliability.
While the content highlighted the earning potential within this space, it’s equally important to balance that excitement with a realistic and responsible career roadmap. For those looking to enter the world of vibration monitoring, understanding the required ISO certifications, technical foundations, and long-term development paths is essential for a successful career in predictive maintenance.
Why Vibration Monitoring and Analysis Is Different
Vibration Analysis is a highly technical and niche discipline. To put this into perspective, South Africa currently has fewer than ±3,000 qualified ISO Category I vibration analysts. This small number reflects the specialist nature of the field, especially when compared to larger semi-skilled or skilled sectors such as fibre or network technicians, which are estimated to include 40,000–60,000 practitioners.
This scarcity is not accidental. Vibration Monitoring and Vibration Analysis demands deep technical understanding, disciplined field experience, and long-term professional commitment.
Our Approach to Training: Integrity Over Hype
It’s important to be clear: we do not view training as a profit-making exercise. We have no interest in capitalising on internet hype or viral trends. Our responsibility is to uphold the integrity of the profession and ensure that individuals entering this field are set up for long-term success—not disappointment.
For this reason, we must state honestly: a 5-day course does not guarantee employment.
Professional credibility in this industry is built through experience, competence, and accountability. Any suggestion that a short course alone can unlock a high-paying career does a disservice to both learners and the profession itself.
The Real Career Path: A Five-Stage Progression
In vibration analysis, field experience outweighs classroom learning. Technical competence is developed through structured exposure, repetition, and application in real industrial environments. The typical progression looks like this:
1. Industrial Maintenance and Safety
Most professionals begin as assistants, learners, or apprentices. This stage focuses on understanding industrial plants, machinery components, safety protocols, and correct workplace behaviour.
2. Supervised Data Collection
Once familiar with plant operations, individuals begin collecting vibration data under the supervision of a qualified analyst. This hands-on phase ensures correct sensor placement, data accuracy, repeatability, and reliable results.
3. Internal Practical Training
At this stage, individuals receive structured in-house training focused on the specific diagnostic tools, software platforms, and methodologies used by their employer.
4. ISO 18436-2 Category I Certification
Only after gaining sufficient field exposure are individuals typically eligible for the 5-day ISO Category I course. This training formalises existing knowledge—it does not replace experience.
A minimum of six months of documented relevant experience is required to obtain official ISO certification. Attending the course alone does not make one certified, nor is it a shortcut to employment.
5. Advanced Professional Growth (Category II–IV)
Beyond Category I, the technical difficulty increases significantly. Category III and IV levels require either a strong STEM qualification or many years of disciplined self-study to master the advanced engineering physics involved.
Practical Advice for Those Seriously Considering This Career
If you are genuinely interested in vibration analysis, we recommend starting with free self-study resources available online. This allows you to build foundational knowledge and test your interest before committing financially.
We also strongly encourage seeking assistant, learnership, or apprenticeship roles. These opportunities provide essential machine exposure and demonstrate commitment and work ethic to potential employers.
We have seen cases where individuals paid for training upfront, only to struggle for years to secure employment due to a lack of practical experience. Please also note that Yellotec’s private course fees are payable upon registration and are non-refundable.
Making an Informed Decision
Our intention is not to discourage interest—but to ensure informed decision-making. Entering a specialist technical field without understanding the required commitment can lead to costly miscalculations.
If you have carefully considered these factors and still wish to pursue this path, you will find our course information below.
Vibration Monitoring and analysis is a rewarding and respected profession—but like all true specialist careers, it is built over time, not overnight.





















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