![]() Then, watch them again, 1.5/1.75x (if possible), use your notes as guidance, try to answer questions in your head when AR asks things throughout his videos, like "What documents are in the scope baseline?", or knowing what common ITTOs are, and what items are vital to create, execute, maintain, and monitor throughout the project. Each augments the another, though.īut, I recommend watching the videos at least a couple of times - once to write any notes you need, maybe use the book to understand definitions, terms, and the input & output of a process, knowledge area, documents, and being mindful about the Agile Manifesto & the 12 Principles of Project Management in order to collectively, as a team, push toward the goal for the project/phase. Personally, since the book is dry, I wasn't going to consume it without leveraging another medium, but conversely the same for the videos. I definitely would recommend going through the videos at least a couple of times. Great place to start, imo, is PMBOK® Guide 6th Ed Processes Explained with Ricardo Vargas! There were even some sentences that were shockingly close, but the model was closer to a situation where all questions were technically right, where one was the "bullish" approach (ie., wrong, based on Agile Principles, etc), one being almost right but a word either invalidates the choices or is something that happens regardless so it's not the best choice, as it ultimately comes down to one of two choices, where one is the best, sometimes purely from a logical perspective (eg., "create change request" for a change question in a waterfall approach about scope), but also because it happens before the other choice, which is also kind of right, but just happens later. Sometimes the right answer even seems wrong or asinine, but it ultimately comes down to a number of factors that should always be static time, and where along the chain you (ie., the project, based on the question, and key time-reference words) are.īased on studying, PMI Study Hall+ was the closest to the test. It was vital in my success, especially considering I took nearly 450 notes, via Obsidian, and took time to connect each note/node, but you will need a high-level, but deadly accurate, understanding of how things interoperate with one another, where in the chain of events you are within the question itself, and remaining consistent(for 180 questions) with the endurance in picking out words (eg., might/will/have/refuse/who/why/when/how) to know which choice is best, will get you the right answer. It is not a static table like AR & PMBOK make it out to be. The biggest hurdle I had to overcome was finally understanding that the 49 process, 5 groups, 10 knowledge areas happen all the time, regardless if its' a project or a phase, but some may not come online, depending on the project type, methodologies at play, the situation, etc. Looking back, if I had to go into the PMP Exam again (achieved first-attempt June 2nd, 2022), especially in a panicked flurry 72 hours prior, after 30 days of studying, I cannot emphasize understanding the flow between each process, knowledge area, and in a way, which ITTOs matter most for key-processes (eg., Risk, Scope, etc), all while understanding where in the chain of events you are for that particular question. It might work for some, but for me, I would've failed. Basically, don't just assume the videos equals pass. However, whichever Udemy course you choose, you're presented with a skeletal structure that's enough to get you by, but depending on how you consume the material, review & analyze it, and incorporate it into your learning matters most. Updated for the current PMP Exam and based on PMI's Exam Content Outline.I went with AR, though I would also highly recommend PMI Study Hall+.Join the thousands of others who've completed this top-rated course and passed their PMP exam. Over 300,000 people have completed this seminar. He is certified as a PMP, PMI-ACP, ITIL, Project+, and is a Certified Technical Trainer. He is the author of several project management books from McGraw-Hill, the American Management Association, and Dummies Press. Joseph has trained over 700,000 people on project management and is considered the expert on PMI certifications. This course provides 35 PDUs/Contact Hours and is taught by project management expert Joseph Phillips. ![]() You also want to learn from an authority in project management, in an online environment with plenty of practice exam questions, videos, and concise explanations. You need to pass the PMP exam and you need quality training that'll help you in your role as a project manager. Do you want to pass your PMP on your first attempt? We’ve helped thousands of people earn their PMP credential – and if they can do it, you can do it too. ![]()
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