Thursday, March 11, 2010    
   You are here : Students of PM  >  PMP Study Group Page
Register   Login   
Successful Project's FREE PMP Study Group

Every Monday night from 5:30 pm - 7:00 pm, Successful Projects hosts a FREE PMP study group that is available via dial-in and inperson in our training room at 3120 South Avenue, La Crosse, WI. Presenters are generally volunteers from our PMP study group participants. The format is generally 5 minutes of introductions and announcements, 55 minutes of slides/presentations of the evenings topic, and 30 minutes of related practice exam questions.

Please register/enroll below for sessions you plan to attend. The sessions slides and questions will be e-mailed to all enrolled participants about 2 hours prior to the meeting start.

 
Upcoming Events
 

       
Event StartEvent EndTitle
3/15/2010 5:30 PM 3/15/2010 7:00 PM
3/22/2010 5:30 PM 3/22/2010 7:00 PM
3/29/2010 5:30 PM 3/29/2010 7:00 PM
4/5/2010 5:30 PM 4/5/2010 7:00 PM
4/12/2010 5:30 PM 4/12/2010 7:00 PM
4/19/2010 5:30 PM 4/19/2010 7:00 PM
4/26/2010 5:30 PM 4/26/2010 7:00 PM
5/3/2010 5:30 PM 5/3/2010 7:00 PM
5/4/2010 9:00 AM 5/4/2010 5:00 PM
5/5/2010 9:00 AM 5/5/2010 5:00 PM
5/10/2010 5:30 PM 5/10/2010 7:00 PM
5/17/2010 5:30 PM 5/17/2010 7:00 PM
5/24/2010 5:30 PM 5/24/2010 7:00 PM
6/2/2010 6/3/2010
6/18/2010 6:00 PM 6/20/2010 5:00 PM

   
Call for Presenters

Our PMP study group presentations are led by volunteers each week. If you are already a PMP you can earn PDUs for presenting. If you are studying to take your PMP exam or just a student of PM, you still are welcome to present to our group.

 

Presenting usually means preparing an hour-long overview of the topic of the night from the information out of the PMBOK. The presentation volunteer traditionally creates a PowerPoint presentation that gets shared with the group. The volunteer can present virtually (via our phone bridge) or in person.

 

Earn PDUs for presenting: If you are the only presenter for the event you may earn 10 PDUs under category 2C (Speaker/teacher on project and/or program management topic at a conference, symposium, workshop, or formal course). If you are a co-presenter or part of a panel for the event, you may earn 5 PDUs under category 2E (Member or moderator of a project and/or program management panel discussion at a conference, symposium, workshop, or formal course).

 

Information and Files for our PMP Study Group

Minimize

Recommended Steps:

  1. Print out and read the PMP Handbook
     
  2. Join PMI national and your local PMI chapter at www.pmi.org
     
  3. If you are ready to apply for certification, build your profile on PMI's web site
    • Draft your information
       
    • Verify your information
       
    • Notify your contacts
       
    • Save your documentation
       
    • Submit your online application
    • After receiving notice that your application has been approved, submit exam payment
      • $405 for PMI members
      • $555 for nonmembers
  4. Join a PMP study group (like ours)
     
  5. Create a PMP study plan (including reading the PMBOK at least once, selections from additional reading lists including at least one PMP Prep workbook, practice exams, and possibly prep courses)
     
  6. Sign up to receive daily practice questions here.
     
     
  7. Schedule your exam, take it, and pass it!
     
Advice about PMP exam prep studying
By Cornelius Fichtner, PMP - Helping you prepare for the PMP Exam
 
Should you learn ITTOs by Heart?
 
 
Do you feel that in order to pass the Project Management Professional (PMP) ® exam you should memorize the PMBOK® Guide’s ITTOs (Inputs, Tools, Techniques and Outputs)? Do you think that the PMP exam is full of IITO type of questions? Many people still believe this myth. Well, let me clear some misconceptions…
 
Many project managers have successfully passed the PMP exam without any memorization. The current PMP exam is all about an in-depth understanding of applying project management concepts and principles from the PMBOK® Guide as well as general management knowledge from other sources to project situations.
 
Granted, ITTOs are a major part of the PMBOK® Guide and about 75% of material for the PMP Exam is taken from the PMBOK® Guide. So it’s understandable that we assume because there are hundreds of ITTOs in the Guide the exam must be full of knowledge-based questions about them. And sample questions like “Which of the following is not an Input of the Create WBS process?” are plentiful on the internet.
 
So should you, or should you not memorize them?
 
Here is my story: When I studied for my PMP exam I knew them by heart. I could tell you exactly which ITTO is used in which process. But I took my exam years ago. Since then the PMP exam has become more experience-based using situational questions over knowledge-based questions.
 
Therefore a change in approach is needed.
 
It is still important to have a general understanding about which ITTO is used in which process, but you do not need to be able to recite them by heart. It is much more important to understand the concept of "Why is this ITTO used in this process?" Your knowledge about WHY an ITTO is used in a process will definitely help you to arrive at the right answer.
 
Additionally, this new approach is much more helpful for you as a project manager in the long run. Frankly speaking, who cares whether an ITTO is part of a particular process or not after you have passed the PMP exam? If you need to know, you can just look it up! But knowing what they are, why you need them and how to apply them successfully on your projects greatly enhances your project management skills. It goes a long way in making you an exceptional project manager.
 
As you are studying the ITTOs for your PMP Exam, keep the following concepts in mind:
 
First of all, Inputs and Outputs are always “things”, like a project management plan, a measurement, a result, an update to a plan, a document or a deliverable. You can touch Inputs and Outputs.
 
Second, it is very common that an Output from one process becomes an Input to another process. Focus your studies on understanding how these items flow through the many processes in the PMBOK® Guide in order to produce our project deliverables. Use the many charts that the Guide provides to see this graphically.
 
Third, Tools & Techniques very often have some form of “action” attached to them, like a meeting, a methodology, a technique, a form that you must fill in, or a matrix that you create.
 
And lastly, don’t forget to read the complete PMBOK® Guide glossary. Study and understand the definitions of the roughly 350 terms that you find here. Again, you are not doing this for memorization sake, but instead you want to learn “the language” of the PMP exam. Often we use project management terms loosely and interchangeably in our day to day work. But for the exam we have to know exactly what each term means.
 
Reading the glossary ensures that you know the correct definitions, and, as a bonus, the glossary indicates for each term if it is an input/output, tool or technique.
 
So move beyond a third-graders approach of fact memorization. Instead, study the big picture, the data flows and how the ITTOs are the glue between the processes.
 
About the author: Cornelius Fichtner, PMP is a noted PMP expert. He has helped over 9,000 students prepare for the PMP Exam with his PM PrepCast at http://www.pm-prepcast.com.
 
About the PMPrepCast

Successful Projects highly recommends the Cornelius Fitchner PMPrepCast is a study aid for the PMP exam. 

 

This is a link to a YouTube video overview of the program.

 

Click on the graphic below for a link to the PMPrepCast registration.

 

 
 
 
Copyright 2009 by Successful Projects