Hi All,

There is a bit of a disconnect that PMP Exam takers report as they are
preparing for the exam. Because you must be an experienced project manager
to take the exam, you bring years of experience in managing projects and
using tools & techniques with you. Often, these are based on company
internal project management best practices and tactics that you found
working for you. However, the PMP
Exam<http://www.project-management-prepcast.com/>requires that you
apply the concepts from the PMBOK Guide to real-life
situations as presented in the exam questions. If the methodology that you
are experienced in using is not aligned with the PMBOK Guide, then you may
pick the wrong answers in your test.

Furthermore, the projects you manage may not have required you to deal in
all the PMBOK Guide's Knowledge Areas. For instance, risk management was
something I did very rarely on my projects and maybe in your career you
never had to deal with procurement. So it is likely that you’ll be more
comfortable with some project management knowledge areas and processes than
others. This can lead to two problems:

First you may feel that because you are an absolute pro in scheduling (after
all you have years of experience here) you can slack off in your studies and
rely on your own project management experience instead. You tend to minimize
studying for the areas you know best. But this can hurt you because the
PMBOK’s approach is the correct approach for the PMP exam.

The second is the tendency to minimize the importance of project management
areas with which you are unfamiliar. Just because I didn't do much risk
management doesn't mean that it isn't important. But we are creatures of
habit, so it's only normal to also think that the "unimportant" areas on our
projects are also "unimportant" on the exam. PMPs are expected to
demonstrate a good understanding of all aspects of project management as
defined in the PMBOK. So pay particular attention to the processes with
which you are not familiar.

So what's the best approach? I always recommend to my students that they
study the PMBOK Guide at least twice before taking the exam and that they
immediately start using the practices learned on their projects. Applying
the theory from the PMBOK Guide on your projects is the best way of learning
it and passing the exam.


Until next time,
Cornelius Fichtner, PMP
The Project Management PrepCast™ -
http://www.project-management-prepcast.com
The Project Management Podcast™ - http://www.project-management-podcast.com

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"project managment" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/project-managment?hl=en.

Reply via email to