Here is a quick compilation of non-affiliated (I hope) advice on preparing for the PMP. Advice on PMP prep abounds on the web, and I have tried to separate out the commercial pieces to provide information as unbiased as possible.
Entries from May 2008
Best Early 2008 PMP prep Advice
May 7th, 2008 · 668 Comments
Tags: Certification
How to Improve Problem Performance on your Project Team
May 6th, 2008 · 1,313 Comments
Anyone who has been “around the block†at least once is likely to have encountered problem performance on the part of at least one person associated with the project. The question is “How do you deal with problem performance and how can you improve it?â€
Tags: Project Management Process · Soft Skills
Developing your Leadership Skills by “Thinking outside the Projectâ€
May 5th, 2008 · 3 Comments
As Project Managers, we are called upon to be leaders much of the time – and really should be thinking about it all of the time. Rather than suggesting that we merely “think outside of the boxâ€, I am suggesting that we “think outside the projectâ€, because, that might be a little more appropriate for the world we as project managers are traveling in. The keys to better leadership performance – and this is a very individual thing – probably lies in our thinking outside of our project.
Tags: Soft Skills
Managing the Diseconomy of Innovation
May 2nd, 2008 · 1,226 Comments
Innovation has a real diseconomy: What is making the organization work now can become at odds with what might make the organization work well, or better in the future. What effect does this have on Project Management, and where can Project Portfolio Management make a difference?
Tags: Project Management Process
Beneficial Mistakes on your Project
May 1st, 2008 · 63 Comments
Thomas Edison was the quintessential mistake maker. He believed that the more mistakes he made, the more wrong answers and wrong solutions he could eliminate and, therefore, the closer he came to the correct solution to his problems. In management and on projects, on one hand, we seek to minimize mistakes but it is important to recognize when “mistakes†can actually be beneficial and produce positive outcomes. Indeed, we should not be afraid to make mistakes but rather should try to control and leverage the process. The project portfolio management process is an ideal place to formally do this.






