Project Management

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Certification Vs Experience

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George Lewis Program/Project Manager| DXC Technology Company Heredia, Costa Rica
Certify and then get a Job to earn experiience or acquire expirience and then obrain a certification?

After I saw someone post an answer to another question, I decided to post this tricky question...
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Pardhasaradhi Reddy Chelikam Manager - Global Internal Audit & Advisory| RAIN INDUSTRIES LIMITED Hyderabad, India
I feel better get first experience and then certification.Once we get better experience and then certification, it gives more confidence in respective work area.
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Nandakumar Choodamani PMP, Project management, 11 years, Networking protocol testing projects.| NOKIA corp - former Alcatel-Lucent Palakkad, Kerala, India
Hi All, I am a beginner when it comes to actual project management,
I was the first to get the PMP certification even before my higher peers. Some of them even failed to pass the exam.
The reason that i was able to pass the exam was, that, i used to observe my peers at every level and try to understand their work pattern and decision making
skills at various project stages and correlate with various concepts in PMP.

My observation is that Experience will give the knowledge about all the stages of the
project coming one after the other as a part of ongoing project activities as learnings.

A project manager who has the knowledge of project management as such in PMP,
will be able to manage various tasks and deliverable in a very highly efficient way.

Either of these combination, experience with PMP certification or
PMP certified beginner having opportunity to work as project manager will be the most efficient combination.
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Johan Hattingh Project Manager| My Home Benoni, Gauteng, South Africa
Hi George, Yes experience is the key ingredient in a successful Project Manager. To achieve PMP certification you should have a great level of experience in managing projects successfully. Although to pass the PMP certification you have to following PMBOK principles.

Regards, Johan
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David Gentry President| Lean-Agile Advisers, LLC Hillsborough, Nc, United States
The PMP credential requires 4800 hours of project manager experience, so you must have some experience to obtain this credential. I highly recommend pursuing this distinction. Even someone who has a lot of experience can learn from completing the requirements.
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Nelson Louro PM Specialist| IBM Lisboa, Odivelas, Portugal
Certification is important to apply for a job. If a company is working with a specific framework like PMP. They ask resources with that certification to assure they already have knowledge off processes/approach they adopted.
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PAWAN RASTOGI Manager| Accenture Bangalore, Karanataka, India
According to me, Certification can be done using theoretical knowledge , reading books, etc., But Experience is "to be acquired with time" even in theory books, we can check best answer of a situation, but experience is built only when you get in such situation and take decision during that time, and real skill come only through experience, their behaviors, body language, tone during conversation etc., and assertive method of "getting the things done" using your intra personal skills can only be done by experience... so certificate is necessary to have aware of the concept but to conceptualize the same is done based on practical experience.
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Daniel Krompholz Principal Maintenance Systems Specialist, Asset Management| The Port Authority of New York & New Jersey Jamaica, Ny, United States
By the amount of respondents, you picked a good topic to bring up :)
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Taylor Kearney Project Manager| Honor Credit Union Berrien Springs, Mi, United States
Certification first then experience. I have seen many managers organizations that mismanage projects who have had 10+ years of experience and no certification. With a certification first approach, you at least have the knowledge and can see right from wrong when applying your own skill sets to the job. By having the education first you have it on your resume and you build the experience on top of that foundation. You often run into managers who spent so long doing the job one way where they are jaded and are not open to new ideas or education about their job. It intimidates them and they cast out anyone wanting to change the way things are done. Especially when it is better way of managing projects.
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1 reply by Demetrius Williams
Sep 26, 2016 10:13 PM
Demetrius Williams
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This is very interesting point here.
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Demetrius Williams Atlanta, Ga, United States
Sep 26, 2016 8:45 PM
Replying to Taylor Kearney
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Certification first then experience. I have seen many managers organizations that mismanage projects who have had 10+ years of experience and no certification. With a certification first approach, you at least have the knowledge and can see right from wrong when applying your own skill sets to the job. By having the education first you have it on your resume and you build the experience on top of that foundation. You often run into managers who spent so long doing the job one way where they are jaded and are not open to new ideas or education about their job. It intimidates them and they cast out anyone wanting to change the way things are done. Especially when it is better way of managing projects.
This is very interesting point here.
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Aude Scheibli-Roumegoux Strategic Director EPMO| Fifth Third Bank Cincinnati, Oh, United States
Experience trumps anything, however a certification can sanction the experience. Anyways most professional certifications require to document some level of experience to get certified...
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