Project Management Professional And What You Need To Become One

by George Purdy

If you want to manage high technology projects in telecommunications or software, you will require a great deal of training to be successful. You will need proper certification to be seriously considered for such positions. The Project Management Institute offers the Project Management Professional certification that will fulfill your needs.

There are a number of prerequisites you must meet prior to applying for “Project Management Profession” certification. If you have completed college, you must have at least three years of post-graduate experience in a related field. During these three years you are required to have spent at least 4,500 hours actually coordinating and leading projects. If you didn’t go to college, or didn’t complete your course of study, you can still apply for certification provided you have seven years of related work experience. During those seven years you must have spent at least 7,500 hours coordinating and leading projects.

You must complete a long process of education and evaluation before you can be certified as a project management professional. You must demonstrate that you are knowledgeable in many areas of project management including project management technology, project risk management, quality management, and project activity scheduling, among others. You should be able to apply SCRUM, JIT, Agile Project Management, and other frequently employed methodologies to the practice of project management.

After studying the previous topics, you can naturally transition to developing competence in the standardized fields required by the Project Management Institute. This is quite a simple task to accomplish, since you possess the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK), which was mailed to you as soon as your application for certification was received.

A way to show that you can work is by participating in workshops, formal training programs and online training courses provided by recognized educational sources. These sources have courses that are recognized by the Project Management Institute and taking these courses helps you gain credits and well as experience using theories and project management application software.

When you’re taking the test, try not to stress about the passing criteria. The advantage of a test based on Angoff and Nedelsky evaluation methods is that it takes into account both your individual marks and the average score of the other test takers - so if you found the test to be difficult even after diligent studying, odds are your fellow candidates are having similar difficulties and scores will reflect that. And when you pass the test, you’ll be rewarded with the title “Project Management Professional”.

The Project Management Institute offers the project management professional certification that will fulfill your needs. You will need to be able to prove your expertise with project management technology, project risk management, project activity scheduling, project quality management, and in other program areas. Don’t preoccupy yourself with worrying about if you will pass while taking the examination. If you have studied yet still find it difficult, the odds are that everyone else who is taking the exam is finding it just as difficult. That’s the advantage of an exam utilizing the Angoff and Nedelsky evaluation methodology.

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