![]() First break after completing 100 questions and then at 200th question. So, make sure you reach at least half an hour before the exam. My exam was at 8am in the morning, but all the formalities got over by 8:45am and I started my exam at 8:50am till 12:50pm. I reached at 7:45am but close to 10 people have already reached before me and the invigilator was explaining all the details about the dos and don'ts of the exam individually to every candidate. Try to reach as early as possible for the exam. It helped me practice the entire 10 knowledge areas and 49 processes.ħ) Last day of exam, I did one 50 qs quiz and just went through Executing Process and Monitoring and Control processes again as they form maximum percentage of the exam. ![]() And did multiple 50qs and 30 qs quizzes, mostly got above 75 percent.Ħ)2 days before the exam, I watched Richard Vargas video(youtube) and while he was talking about each process, I was simultaneously going through their ITTOs. I RECOMMEND USING THAT!Ĥ) Practiced after chapter questions from Andy Crowe and Rita Mulcahy.ĥ) Did Oliver Lehmann practiced test(free test-link provided below) and got 73 percent. I liked Andy Crowe a lot as it was easy to read and finished reading it in 3 days. Prepcast Simulator has 1700 mock questions and it costs $139 - I recommend buying as it has 8 full-length mocks (200 questions each) and it helps you build the stamina of sitting continuously for 4 hours and working on 200 questions as you will do on the exam day.ģ) I also rented books - Rita Mulcahy and Andy Crowe from the city library. But that made sense, as I had just started studying. Did miserable initially, mostly getting 40-50 percent. I started with PMBOK reading and parallelly bought Prepcast Simulator (It has 1600 mock questions) and practiced questions from it-30 at a time. DO NOT DO THAT! Book the exam immediately.ģ)Once you have PMI Membership, you get PMBOK guide for free to download. I have seen a lot of people who believe they will study first and then book the exam. I really recommend everyone to immediately apply for the exam so that there is a push to study (obviously since you've paid $545 - $129 for membership and rest for the exam). 12 dollars for 35 hours of training is worth taking! I highly recommend that!Ģ)After finishing the 35 hours training, I immediately filled in the PMP application and sent it to PMI for approval My application date was July 29, approval date from the PMI was Aug 3 and I took the exam on Aug 26. I studied for close to 20-25 days, around or less than 100 hours.ġ) I took Udemy course ($12) to check mark the 35 hours in-class training prerequisite. Note – I have provided the links in the end of the article of all the study material and tests that I referred to during the entire process. Just make sure you know why you want to do PMP, what impact does it have on your professional growth and let that drive your study plan and deadlines. I know it gets tough to take out even 2 hours to study while you are working, and it is totally normal. I am giving the details to let you all know that I am in all way like you, I work Monday to Friday, 9 hours a day. I have Bachelor’s in Mechanical engineering (India) and Master’s in Engineering Management (United States). I am a working professional with 3-4 years of work experience in Supply Chain domain. 4,500 hours leading and directing projects.35 hours of project management education OR CAPM certification.7,500 hours leading and directing projects.Secondary degree (high school diploma, associate’s degree or the global equivalent).PMP Prerequisites (as on the PMI website). Other categories are Target, Below Target, Needs Improvement, Failed (Scary right?)! I gave PMP exam on and cleared all areas with ATs! (AT means Above Target).
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