Contribute to the Project Management Knowledge Base

Wednesday, December 30th, 2009

One of the key professional responsibilities of a project manager is contributing to the project management knowledge base. What does this mean?

In a nutshell, don’t keep your knowledge and experience locked in your brain. Share it!!  Brain

  • Share knowledge
  • Research
  • Build the capabilities of colleagues (i.e., teach, mentor, provide opportunities for your colleagues and your team members to build experience and knowledge)
  • Advance the profession (engage in activities that will improve the overall PM profession; engage in activities that will promote the profession)
  • Step up, at your own organization, to champion the value of project management. That is, playing a key role in the growth of PM within your organization
  • Always record “lessons learned” at the end of a project or project phase; contribute to your organization’s organization process assets (OPAs). These 2 activities contribute to PM knowledge base and will help your colleagues during future projects
  • Participate in PM forums, conferences and PMI chapter meetings
  • Write articles


PMI expects PMPs to stay engaged with the profession.

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What is the PMBOK Guide

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Clearing Up Some Misconceptions About the PMBOK Guide

Listening to PMP candidates, project managers, and students of management and project management,  I’ve learned that there are some misconceptions about what the PMBOK Guide is. Some think that it’s intended as a textbook on project management. Others think that it describes some kind of project  management methodology. Yet others have the notion that it’s meant as a study guide for the examination component of the PMP credential. Some even think that the PMP exam is on something called “PMBOK” (whatever that is) and that the Guide to the PMBOK is a study guide or textbook covering the topic of “PMBOK.”

I’d like to clear up some of the misconceptions.
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Enabling Career Advancement – But not for you

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

I came a across an interesting article on the Projects@work website, Enabling Career Advancement by Mary Ann Bopp, Diana Bing and Sheila Forte-Trammell, which is an excerpt from their book, Agile Career Development: Lessons and Approaches from IBM.

Their basic premise is that: “Project-driven organizations can benefit in many ways from creating a career framework that gives employees the opportunity to grow — and share — their knowledge and skills by moving across job roles or business units. In the process, they align company values and culture, optimize resources and increase client satisfaction.”

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