I had experience with projects in different industries from IT,
academic world to a big engineering project but I had no formal project
qualification. PMP seemed like a viable option and I got genuinely
interested in the subject. I simply wanted to know more. First I only
considered CAPM. I took the online course (
Essentials of Project Management) before
it occurred to me that I had enough experience to go for PMP.
Nevertheless I don't regret taking that course because it gave me solid
basic knowledge (it is hard to read PMBOK® like beletry). Some of the
questions in that online course were no less challenging than those in
the actual PMP exam. The difference is that CAPM exam would take 3
instead of 4 hours and it probably goes into slightly less detail.
Nevertheless, if you're new to PMI, I consider this to be a very good
start. Don't feel embarrased if you feel more 'experienced'. It's no
shame. It's worth it. I spent about 2 months doing it.
Once I was past that (having done all the simulator questions there), I read the entire Rita Book:
PMP Exam Prep, Eighth Edition: Rita's Course in a Book for Passing the PMP Exam
Rita is good because she gives you that different perspective. It is
not just about processes and ITTOs, there is more of that 'humane' touch
and you learn to read between the lines for the first time. Plus, some
of the questions really humbled me. You simply start to learn the tricks
and get acquianted with the PMI way of thinking. This took me about 1.5
months of serious work.
I took
PMP Prepcast by Cornelius Fichtner as part of the 30 contact
hours requirement to take PMP exam. I knew I was running out of time and
so I knew I wouldn't be able to listen to all the prepcasts before the
exam but I must say I was very pleasantly surprised. Not only I liked
the guy's style very much (including his nice 'foreign' but very clear
accent), it also gave me opportunity to uncover the gaps - and whatever I
hadn't got so far.
Tip:
There is no better way to study than by a simulated exam. (The books and courses might not motivate enough but seeing improving results is very empowering)
Record what you've done wrong and have some kind of
search functionality so you can search for terms. Things repeat and
sometimes you need to have a few goes at it to remember it.
If you don't want to invest in it, at least get a free 3-day trial. It really pays off.
I used a database as a notepad. I was writing down all questions I didn't pass, in all three courses to identify my weak spots. Whenever I got a question wrong, I noted why and searched for previous instances of it. When wanting to clarify something I searched for the term and found the answer, possibly in all three courses. It is always good to have more points of view than just one.
3 and a half months into hard study and my results were NOT fantastic. I was not excelling.
I was achieving about 65% to 76% score, occasionaly getting slightly
more in some areas but nothing that would give me confidence. At first I
was scared of the formulas only to find out later that questions with
formulas were actually my friends and I started to wish for more of
those at the exam. The formulas are easy. The hard part is the
interpretation but even that can be learned. Not wanting to leave
anything to chance I included the
PMP® Exam Formula Study Guide™ in it too. Again, no regrets. It greatly helped me solidify my knowledge.
But I felt I really needed to wrap my effort into some kind of a
schedule just like the PMI preaches. I planned to do all 9 simulator
exams provided in the course. Because of other committments it was not
always easy to find a four-hour time slot so I figured I would need
about a month to do that. The practice exams were very solid and very
well made. I was thrilled and pissed off at myself at the same time
(forgive me that word) because in every knew exam there was something I
still hadn't uncovered or fully understood. It's like - after each one
you're trying your to plug all holes and leaks only to find out later
that you're still leaky. So yes, I was a bit frustrated with myself.
There is one more important aspect of preparation here. When you go
through the simulator, you get the 'feel of time'. The clock is
unforgiving and you simply don't have time to check seconds during the
exam (well, maybe just 'milestones' with every hour). You need to
cultivate a kind of an inner time clock - something that will tell you:
"Tha't it, you need to move on now, man, otherwise you're done!" Think
about it this way. Are you a perfectionist? Well, here you had better
not, or you won't get very far.
My initial self-assessment results in Fichtner's course weren't that
great either. These are the results I got after 3.5 months of relatively
hard study. By knowledge area:
1 - 100% (good start you might say, but wait :), 2 - 66.7%, 3 - 93%, 4
- 80%, 5 - 66.7%, 6 - 66.7%, 7 - 60%, 8 - 80%, 9 - 66.7%, 10 - 80%;
with some additional intro, life cycle and processes preparation of no
more than 70%.
I knew I needed more. Luckily, I already knew by weknesses by now and
I concentrated on those. I was even sort of hooked on the simulator
because it felt a bit like a game. I guessed this was time I had the
biggest "momentum" and this was when I booked the exam with Prometric.