Project Management

Support to Develop

by
This blog addresses management-related topics and has three areas of focus: 1. Technical skills; 2. Competencies in the field of interpersonal relations and communication (including personal organization and delegation, leadership, teamwork, conflict resolution, conducting meetings, and negotiation); and 3. Strategy (including diagnosis, strategic guidelines, and implementation).4.Technology

About this Blog

RSS

Recent Posts

The Emerging Tensions of Adaptive Governance

From Statistical Patterns to Operational Judgment

ORGANIZATIONAL MEMORY & DECISION CONTINUITY

RESPONSIBLE DECISION ARCHITECTURE™

Decision Architecture Under Pressure

Categories

Agile, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Career Development, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Leadership, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Strategy, Sustainability, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management, Talent Management

Date

Ethics vs. Methodology: What Truly Shapes Our Profession?

linkedin twitter facebook Request to reuse this  


A question emerged several times throughout this series:
“What is more important for our profession - the PMBOK® Guide or PMI’s four new ethics documents?”

The answer is clear, structural, and unavoidable:
The ethical documents are more important than the PMBOK® Guide - 8th Edition.

Here’s why.

1. The PMBOK guides how to manage projects.
Ethics guides how professionals must behave.

The PMBOK is a body of knowledge.
The Code of Ethics is a professional obligation.
When process and integrity collide, Ethics always prevails.

2. No one loses a certification for violating the PMBOK.
But one can lose it for violating the Code of Ethics.

This defines the hierarchy.
The PMBOK can be interpreted, tailored, or adapted.
Ethics is not optional, it is mandatory.

3. The PMBOK shapes technique.
Ethics shapes the professional.

A technically imperfect but ethical practitioner:
- Can grow.
A highly skilled but unethical practitioner:
- Endangers projects, teams, organizations, and trust.

4. In audits, disputes, or ethical investigations it is the Code that determines correct conduct.

The four ethical documents:
PMI Code of Ethics and Professional Conduct (2025)
EDMF – Ethical Decision-Making Framework
Practitioner Ethics Toolkit
Chapter Board Ethics Toolkit

Are disciplinary, regulatory, and binding.
The PMBOK is not.

5. These four documents form the new ethical architecture of the profession.

They transform:
• Implicit values → explicit expectations
• Instinctive decisions → intentional decisions
• Passive culture → active ethical culture
• Individual responsibility → shared responsibility

The PMBOK structures the work.
Ethics protects people, projects, and reputation.

Direct conclusion
The PMBOK evolves with time.
Ethics sustains the profession.

Without the PMBOK, projects can still be managed in other ways.
Without ethics, there is no trust, no credibility, and no profession.

Methodology matters.
Conduct is essential.

And PMI’s four ethical documents represent the most significant ethical evolution in our profession in more than a decade.

To explore all official PMI ethics resources:
PMI members’ ethics commitments

Note: This reflection is personal and independent, based on my study of PMI’s published materials, and does not represent an official PMI position.
Posted on: December 12, 2025 08:30 AM | Permalink | Comments (2)
ADVERTISEMENTS

"Judge a man by his questions rather than his answers."

- Voltaire

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsors