PMP Exam Prep
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The PMI publication that defines widely accepted project management practices. The CAPM and the PMP exam are based on this book. | A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK Guide) |
A person who has slightly less project management experience than a PMP, but who has qualified for and then passed the CAPM examination. | Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM) |
A product, service, or result created by a project. Projects can have multiple deliverables. | Deliverable |
The ability to interact, lead, motivate, and manage people. | Interpersonal skills |
The physical structure and surroundings that affect a project’s work. | Physical environment |
An organization of project management professionals from around the world, supporting and promoting the careers, values, and concerns of project managers. | Project Management Institute (PMI) |
The phases that make up the project. Project life cycles are unique to the type of work being performed and are not universal to all projects. | Project life cycle |
A person who has proven project management experience and has qualified for and then passed the PMP examination. | Project Management Professional (PMP) |
Also known as the Iron Triangle. This theory posits that time, cost, and scope are three constraints that every project has. | Triple Constraints of Project Management |
Raw data, observations, and measurements about project components. Work performance data is gathered and stored in the project management information system. | Work performance data |
Work performance information is the processed and analyzed data that will help the project manager make project decisions. | Work performance information |
An organization where organizational resources are pooled into one project team, but the functional managers and the project managers share the project power. | Balanced matrix structure |
An organization that creates a blend of the functional, matrix, and project- oriented structures. | Hybrid structure |
A business unit that centralizes the operations and procedures of all projects within the organization. The PMO can be supportive, controlling, or directive. | Project management office (PMO) |
An organization that assigns a project team to one project for the duration of the project life cycle. The project manager has high-to-almost-complete project power. | Project-oriented structure |
An organization where organizational resources are pooled into one project team, but the functional managers have less project power than the project manager. | Strong matrix structure |
An organization where organizational resources are pooled into one project team, but the functional managers have more project power than the project manager. | Weak matrix structure |
The project manager aims to gain favor with the project team and stakeholders through flattery. | Ingratiating power |
The individual has power and control of the data gathering and distribution of information. | Informational power |
The project manager can make the team and stakeholders feel guilty to gain compliance in the project. | Guilt-based power |
Based on the audience and the message being sent, the media should be in alignment with the message. | Media selection |
The project manager has a warm personality that others like. | Personal or charismatic power |
The project manager can restrict choices to get the project team to perform and do the project work. | Pressure-based power |
The role of leading the project team and managing the project resources to effectively achieve the objectives of the project. | Project manager |
The project manager can punish the project team. | Punitive or coercive power |
The project manager can reward the project team. | Reward power |
This is an example of a benefits comparison model. It examines the benefit-to-cost ratio. | Benefit/cost ratio (BCR) models |
A committee that evaluates the worthiness of a proposed change and either approves or rejects the proposed change. | Change control board (CCB) |
This plan details the project procedures for entertaining change requests: how change requests are managed, documented, approved, or declined. | Change management plan |
This plan defines who will get what information, how they will receive it, and in what modality the communication will take place. | Communications management plan |
This includes the labeling of the components, how changes are made to the product, and the accountability of the changes. | Configuration identification |
The organization of the product materials, details, and prior product documentation. | Configuration status accounting |
The scope verification and completeness auditing of project or phase deliverables to ensure that they are in alignment with the project plan. | Configuration verification and auditing |
The formal verification of the contract completeness by the vendor and the performing organization. | Contract closure |
This is the aggregated costs of all of the work packages within the work breakdown structure (WBS). | Cost baseline |
This plan details how the project costs will be planned for, estimated, budgeted, and then monitored and controlled. | Cost management plan |
Knowledge that can be quickly and easily expressed through conversations, documentation, figures, or numbers, is easily communicated. | Explicit knowledge |
A process to consider and control the impact of a proposed change on the project’s knowledge areas. | Integrated change control |