Below are the questions that came up in the webinar, as well as a few that came to me following the webinar.
A: Yes, all project management training, including certification preparation training, counts. The PMP Certification Boot Camp counts for all 35 contact hours needed to qualify for the PMP Exam.
A: Many project professionals find themselves filling the roles of both PM and BA. For purposes of applying for the PMP exam (or the PMI Professional in Business Analysis (PMI-PBA)® exam), use the appropriate Exam Content Outline (ECO) to help you identify your work as either PM or BA. For example, Planning Task 1 of the PMP Certification ECO reads as follows:
“Review and assess detailed project requirements, constraints, and assumptions with stakeholders based on the project charter, lessons learned, and by using requirement gathering techniques in order to establish detailed project deliverables.”
So, this is workaround project requirements, as opposed to product requirements, which would be the work of business analysis. Think of project requirements as the requirements around the 47 project management processes.
Also, the ECO includes specific tasks, but there is a lot of work that can be included within each task. For example, Executing Task 1 reads:
“Acquire and manage project resources by following the human resource and procurement management plans in order to meet project requirements.”
The Acquire Project Team process includes Virtual Teams as a tool, so this would include project management effort working with virtual teams to get project work completed.
A: Yes, all of Watermark’s classes count as contact hours for the PMP certification exam.
A: Basically, time spent learning about techniques used while doing PM activities count. So, if it’s a 20-hour course, and 8 hours cover PM-related work, then it would count as 8 hours. For example, you might spend time in a course learning about estimating techniques used to plan project work, so that part of the class would count. Time spent on the technical aspects of engineering would not count. It’s not course-specific.
A: Absolutely.
A: Remember that it’s not about your title. It’s about the work you do. PMs have project requirements they have to define, too, as described above.
A: The major changes pertain to the following themes:
I highly recommend PMI’s webpage for more details about the changes, including a short webinar that provides some good information.
Check our PMP Certification Resources page for more FAQs, links to PMI, and an experience worksheet to help apply for the PMP exam. Click the image above to become a member today and gain free access to valuable resources!
If you have additional questions or want more information, contact Watermark Learning at info@watermarklearning.com or fill out our Contact Us form.
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