Reading This Will Save You Time and Unnecessary Training ExpenseThe Project Management Professional (PMP) credential establishes
your dedication to professional project management. To gain
the PMP designation, you must satisfy certain educational and
professional experience requirements, as well as, pass a rigorous
200-question exam.
Having the PMP designation provides a
quick way to re-energize your career and can open you up to global
opportunities. Many positions within the field of project
management now require or highly suggest securing your PMP. With a
little dedication and focus, it is possible to receive the PMP
designation in just a few weeks.
To earn the PMP, you must complete the following:
• Submit an application to the
Project Management Institute
• Meet eligibility requirements
• Pass the PMP exam
• Adhere to certain professional standards
Completing the Application
If you apply online, the entire
application process for the PMP takes about 10-15 business days.
Schedule at least 10 hours of your time to complete and review the
application.
Application Review
According to the PMP Handbook, an online
application will be reviewed and acted upon within 5 business days.
Application Audit
The Project Management Institute does
selectively audit a percentage of applications. Therefore, it is
important that you take care in the accuracy and veracity of your
submission. Generally, an audit will be completed within 5 business
days of selection.
To qualify to sit for the PMP exam, the PMP Handbook states that a
candidate:
• Perform their duties under general
supervision and are responsible for all aspects of the project for
the life of the project.
• Lead and direct cross-functional teams
to deliver projects within the constraints of schedule, budget, and
scope.
• Demonstrate sufficient knowledge and
experience to appropriately apply a methodology to projects that
have reasonably well-defined project requirements and deliverables.
As usual, there is some room for
interpretation in the eligibility requirements. Many times,
candidates believe that they must hold the Project Manager title in
order to be eligible. In our opinion, this is not the case.
As the handbook asserts, an eligible
candidate must be “leading and directing project tasks”. You could
be a project lead, project coordinator, or a project contributor who
leads a small team through an entire project or just one aspect of a
project lifecycle.
However, all project management experience
must occur within the last eight consecutive years.
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Category 1 PMP Designation |
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If you have a bachelor’s
degree or global equivalent, you need a minimum three years of
“unique non-overlapping professional project management experience”
during which at least 4,500 hours were spent leading and directing
project tasks”.
Remember though, PMI looks at months and
hours as separate requirements. When you work on two projects
during the same month, you can count only 1 month toward the
requirement. However, the total hours worked during that month on
both projects can be applied to the 4500 hours necessary.
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Category 2 PMP Designation |
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If you have a high school diploma, associates degree, or global
equivalent, the requirements are different. In this case, you
need a "minimum of five years unique non-overlapping experience
during which at least 7500 hours were spent leading and directing
project tasks."
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Contact Hours of Project
Management Education |
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In addition to your project management
experience, you must verify at least 35 contact hours of
specific instruction that addressed learning objectives in project
management. According to the PMP handbook, “document all education
hours regardless of when they were accrued”. We interpret this to
mean – learning is forever. Any training/academic course you have
taken during your career can apply. However, the course must
include content on the following:
• Project quality
• Project scope
• Project schedule
• Project budget
• Project communications
• Project risk
In our opinion, it is not necessary to
have “Project” or “Project Management” in the title. A generic
“Effective Communications” training class should count toward the
requirement, as long as, you believe the course content could be
applied to a project-based scenario.
PMI considers almost all
employer-sponsored training courses/programs as meeting the
requirement. If you have participated in training courses
throughout your career, you most likely do not need to take
additional training to meet the eligibility requirement. Possible
sources of training could include the following:
•
Employer/company-sponsored courses
• Training companies and consultants
• University/academic programs and continuing education
Just be aware that your previous training
courses are not the same as a PMP Exam Prep course. Only an Exam Prep course will prepare you
specifically for the test.
Call to speak to an EdWel PMP-certified Academic
Advisor. They are specially trained to help you get certified
quickly and easily.
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To Discuss - Call
800.544.1995 |
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