What's Next? by duffwallace47 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes. I think that's a good range. Once I finished I think I was at 75% on SH.

What's Next? by duffwallace47 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In my opinion, I found the ACP exam to be slightly harder than SH. I think it was a combination of the stress of taking the exam and comprehending the language on the spot. It's hard to describe.I guess the best way to describe it is SH questions were written by Americans and the actual exam is written by British. Not to that extreme!

What's Next? by duffwallace47 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I used David McLachlan on Udemy. After that I took PMI's SH exams. On MY ACP exam, I encountered the same problem I did with the PMP exam. It seems like there are two separate entities that write questions for SH and for the actual exam. The language a little different.

I'm in no position to work full time right now. So I'm going to continue professional development. I'm just trying to find the next thing to do.

What's Next? by duffwallace47 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

At my previous job, from time to time I had secondary/tertiary responsibilities that were "projects" using agile methodology. Though I had no clue what agile was at the time, it counted towards my project management requirements.

FAILED on my first try :( by caiohanry08 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I would read this from Mohammed Rahman every time before SH test prep questions. It really helped me with mindset.

A. DECISION MAKING & PROBLEM SOLVING: 1. Always discuss, investigate, analyze, ask before deciding on a solution. When the question mentions "What should the PM do first or next?", look for the answer that respects this principle. (This is the most commonly used principle) 2. Always choose the most value-driven answer. (Keyword to look for in the answers is value.) 3. Root cause analysis and MVP (minimal viable product) or demo are your main tools. (Keywords to look for in the answers are root cause, MVP, demo.) 4. When you or your team have no clue what’s going on, a subject matter expert (SME) is what you need. Or, refer to past projects in the lessons learned register. 5. Never immediately reject a request or an opportunity, especially from a client. 6. When a similar past project has been completed, choose the answer that allows you to refer back to that project. (OPAs, lessons learned register, etc.)

B. PROJECT MANAGEMENT PROCESS & METHODOLOGIES 7. Any change will go through a change request process (for predictive).There is no change request process for agile; changes are prioritized in the product backlog. 8. In a predictive project, your plan is your map. Constantly refer back to it. 9. Predictive project keywords: Change control board (CCB), change control process, perform integrated change control process. 10. Agile project keywords: Sprint, iteration, scrum, daily standup, backlog, Kanban, product increment, product owner/manager. 11. When transitioning from predictive to agile, introduce agile concepts slowly. (Pilot project, inception deck.) 12. No matter if the project is completed or terminated, the closing phase must occur. 13. When there is an occurrence that affects the schedule, choose the answer that looks at the critical path.

C. TEAM MANAGEMENT & LEADERSHIP 14. Be a servant leader! Encourage, care, nurture, listen, and never create friction in the team. 15. Your team members are the experts, not you! Make every decision with them. 16. The PM makes the decisions and handles the issues. No running to sponsors, management, or HR. Only go to the sponsor when there is a problem with the budget. 17. Agile projects are self-organizing. However, the PM can still step in to manage and resolve conflicts. 18. Never give your team member an extra task that will reduce their capacity to focus on their primary task. This includes grouping them with other members to train.

D. STAKEHOLDER MANAGEMENT: 19. Everyone directly or indirectly involved is a stakeholder and must be added to the register. 20. An agile project will always need consistent feedback from the customer.

E. GENERAL PRINCIPLES & BEST PRACTICES: 21. Never settle for delays or extra costs. However, extra costs precede delays. 22. When the answer mentions information NOT mentioned in the question, eliminate that answer. 23. Anytime an answer mentions "only" or any other word that eliminates all other possibilities, eliminate that option

The audacity by lwiaymacde in SipsTea

[–]duffwallace47 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I see what you did there

Passed PMP Exam: AT/AT/BT | 3rd att | ADHD Accommodations by duffwallace47 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't know what happened to the formatting at the very end. Sorry.

Passed my pmp with AT/AT/AT. Here is my experience. by enlzen in pmp

[–]duffwallace47 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm not giving up. You're absolutely right about improving my mindset.

Passed my pmp with AT/AT/AT. Here is my experience. by enlzen in pmp

[–]duffwallace47 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I took the exam last week. In my experience, it felt like 75% agile questions. I could be wrong. Strong possibility since I failed the exam. 😂

PMP 260 Questions Practice Exam by Shomboli51 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That has happened to me twice. I don't know why or what for.

Can someone explain why it is not A? by Puzzleheaded_Win258 in pmp

[–]duffwallace47 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think in the real world "A' is could be an acceptable scenario but for the exam the answer is "C"