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TOPIC: The ITTOs you should know for the PMP Exam

The ITTOs you should know for the PMP Exam 11 years 2 weeks ago #3854

  • Edward Chung
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After 3 hours and 36 minutes of sitting before a computer answering 200 PMP Exam questions, I am finally a certified PMP. The whole preparation journey is both a joyful and fruitful experience for me and my professional life.

Below, I try to document my lessons learned in the famous (or infamous) format of ITTOs adopted by PMI for the 47 processes described in the PMBOK Guide version 5 with a little bit background first.

Background
My name is Edward Chung and I am a full-stack web developer/designer/project manager working in the education sector in Hong Kong. I handle web development projects large and small, including major revamp exercise, one-page landing page, online application and systems. I have always wanted some sort of testimonial to my project management skills and PMP is the definite choice.

Inputs

1. PMBOK Guide Version 5
This guide can be downloaded free from the PMI website once you have applied and paid to become a member.
2. The Project Management Precast Exam Prep Video Workshop by Cornelius Fichtner
This video workshop allows me to fulfill the PMI’s requirement of 35 contact hours for project management education without causing disruptions to my normal life. I can take the lessons whenever I am alone without the need to dedicating a fixed period of time for the lectures. I have also written a review of PM PrepCast on my website.
3. The PMP Exam – How to Pass On Your First Try (5th Edition) by Andy Crowe
A great book that’s easy to read and study, the author has disgested the PMBOK Guide
4. Free online PMP Exam Sample Questions/Test Bank
You may get the list at my website.

Tools and Techniques

1. Document Review
The document I am talking about is of course the PMBOK Guide. I read through it twice during my preparation. This is of utmost importance as any reference books do not contain 100% of the contents from this book.
2. Decomposition
PMI does not require the contact hours to be attainted through formal face-to-face lectures. That gives the possibility of gaining the required 35 contact hours remotely through a podcast lessons – The Project Management Precast which can be downloaded to any portable media player (coincidentally abbreviated also as PMP) and I can own the files for good. With such flexibility, the required contact hours can be decomposed at my own will. I may study for 30 minutes on the MTR, 15 minutes while walking, 30 minutes at lunch and 45 minutes before bed. That would add up to a total study time of around 2 hours each day. (You may read more on this from this post)
3. Progressive Elaboration
Everyone agrees that the PMBOK Guide is a dry read. I do. I read it twice during my preparation without falling asleep. How? During the first time, I read it as fast as I could without trying to memorize any single bit of information from the guide (somewhat like skimming the contents). I wanted to get an overview of the exam syllabus. Then I switched to the reference book and the podcast lesson, making my notes in the information system as I studied. Then I came to the PMBOK Guide the second time, this time I tried to read the guide in more details, jotting down all the information not included in my previous notes. The PMBOK Guide is now making much sense to me during the second reading.
4. Performance Review
Originally, I planned to prepare for the PMP exam for 3 months. But when I noticed that I reached milestones much faster than I anticipated, I fixed the date of PMP exam a month earlier. In total, it took me 2 months to clear the PMP exam.
5. Information System
I used Evernote to jot down my notes throughout my reading of the PMBOK Guide, reference textbook and whenever I got wrong answers to the exam sample questions. The advantage of Evernote is that I can make changes on my MAC and the updates are automatically synced with my mobile app, vice versa. This tool is a must for my study.
6. Benchmarking
While doing the free online PMP exam sample questions/test banks, I would search through lessons learned from other successful PMPs looking for their results on the same sets of questions and their proficiency level in the real PMP exam. These are to be used as a benchmark to assess my readiness for the PMP exam. When I can consistently score around 80%-90% in all the prep exams, I am confident that I should be able to pass the PMP exam with several ‘Proficient’ domains. (You may read more on the benchmarks I gathered here)

Outputs

1. PMP Success
PMP is one of my ambition in life. Now, I have achieved it!
2. Final Product/Service/Result Transition
Getting the PMP is not the final destination, the new knowledge gained will be applied in my daily work to perfect my project management skills and deliver more success.

Thanks Cornelius Fichtner, thanks my family, thanks God!
Last edit: by Edward Chung. Reason: Add new contents
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