Blockchain Council Certifications
Blockchain Council is a recognized authority in distributed ledger technology and cryptocurrency education. Their certifications validate hands-on expertise in blockchain development, smart contracts, and enterprise applications. Earning a Blockchain Council credential signals to employers that you've mastered industry-relevant protocols and consensus mechanisms based on current vendor standards.
- Industry-recognized credentials that advance career progression in Web3 and enterprise blockchain roles.
- Curriculum aligned with real-world blockchain architectures and development frameworks used in practice.
- Self-paced learning structure designed for working professionals seeking career transitions.
- Practical exams that test applied knowledge of smart contract development and blockchain security.
- Credentials valued by hiring teams evaluating blockchain engineering and blockchain architect candidates.
- Structured pathways from beginner to advanced certification levels.
Hyperledger Fundamentals Overview
The CBDH exam tests your understanding of distributed ledger technology and Hyperledger's architecture. You'll need to demonstrate knowledge of consensus mechanisms, smart contracts, and blockchain use cases in enterprise environments. In practice, the fundamentals section covers permissioned vs. permissionless networks and why enterprises choose Hyperledger.
Hyperledger Fabric Architecture & Components
This domain focuses on Fabric's modular architecture, including peers, orderers, and certificate authorities. You'll be tested on channel management, chaincode development, and transaction flows. Based on exam objectives, expect questions on endorsement policies, ledger structure, and the complete lifecycle of a blockchain transaction.
Chaincode Development & Smart Contracts
Candidates must write and deploy chaincode using Go or JavaScript. The exam tests your ability to implement business logic, handle state management, and manage asset lifecycle. You'll need practical knowledge of chaincode APIs and debugging techniques used in real deployments.