IndyColtsFan
Lifer
Are there any PMPs here? I have a few questions and was hoping I could talk to someone who recently (say, in the last 12 to 18 months) passed the exam. I'm thinking of pursuing it and have questions regarding the requirements.
I gotta ask what you're doing now? Every engineer I know who becomes a PM loses their technical skills within a year and quickly becomes a people-manager after that.
I gotta ask what you're doing now? Every engineer I know who becomes a PM loses their technical skills within a year and quickly becomes a people-manager after that.
That's my goal. 🙂 I've been a technical person my whole life (EE, IT) and I'm tired of the treadmill.
Trick is though PMs are in very high demand, and can be very rewarding financially. I know PMs too that are still very hands on and "in the trenches". The job ranges quite a bit.
The sad thing is managing people sucks 🙂
They listen worse than most PCs and programs are going to 😉
To give some background, I'm interested in leaving IT or at least, the technical trenches of IT. I've led a ton of projects (many multi-year, global projects) so I believe I have the hours necessary to complete the certification. The PMP seems to be the least risky method of achieving my goal of leaving the tech trenches while maintaining or perhaps increasing my salary.
I was an IT manager several years ago. At the time, I hated it, but now, I think I'd enjoy doing it again.
That's my goal. 🙂 I've been a technical person my whole life (EE, IT) and I'm tired of the treadmill.
Eagerly waiting the "Any IMPS here" thread and the ensuing two week vacation.
The application is a fscking bear (hours and hours of documenting projects you've worked on). I thought the test was easy, but I had coworkers that studied for 6 months and failed twice before passing it. It's computerized multiple-guess, 200 questions, you have 4 hours to complete it.
Feel free to post questions.
Edit: Even though you're a Colts fan.
Creative Zen Vision W checking in, plan on upgrading to the Zune HD2 if/when it comes out.
To give some background, I'm interested in leaving IT or at least, the technical trenches of IT. I've led a ton of projects (many multi-year, global projects) so I believe I have the hours necessary to complete the certification. The PMP seems to be the least risky method of achieving my goal of leaving the tech trenches while maintaining or perhaps increasing my salary.
Note, you don't need to have been a PM to count for the hours requirement. Being on a project team, also qualifies.
Yeah, I downloaded the app to start filling it out in order to see the gaps I might have. As far as projects go, I believe I have more than the proper number of hours -- I led a global Active Directory deployment/server refresh/workstation migration in the 2003 to 2006 timeframe, with several acquisition integrations as well, not to mention some other corporate-wide projects dealing with wireless devices, etc. I did have a project management course around the 2005 timeframe and a Six Sigma course, so I think those likely fulfill the 35 "contact hours" of PM education.