Over on Instagram this week, I conducted a poll: If you’re running into roadblocks learning about project management, what’s the number one thing stopping you? The answer was overwhelming: I’m not sure where to start.
So, in true Caroline Manages form, I’d love to provide you with a resource you can bookmark – a one-stop shop for making your own plan to learn more about project management.
First things first – get your bearings. A couple of fast facts, coming at you:
- Understand that project management can be a discipline – something anyone from any field can practice, no matter what their level of education or title. When you organize, manage, and direct work with a specifically defined beginning and end, you are managing projects. Project management can ALSO be a field unto itself – you can become a professional Project Manager, complete with certifications.
- If you become (or plan to become) a professional Project Manager, you’ll likely want to get involved with Project Management Institute (or PMI), the professional association for Project Management and Project Managers, the same way you’d get involved with NASPA or ACPA as a Student Affairs professional. Becoming a member will cost you $129/year, so I wouldn’t do it until you’re certain you’re interested in the field – BUT, as soon as you’re sure, I’d register that same day. PMI offers professional development opportunities at all sorts of levels, from free one-day workshops to for-fee, months-long certification processes. You can also find and join your local chapter to begin networking with folks nearby!
- If you register as a PMI member, you’ll also receive access to ProjectManagement.com, which is an absolute treasure trove of articles, webinars, templates (!!!), and blogs that are free to PMI members.
PMBOK
The Project Management Institute also maintains the PMBOK as its flagship publication.
The PMBOK is an actual, physical book that outlines the global standards for the profession. Even if you don’t wind up joining PMI due to cost, please purchase the PMBOK. (Note that it’s available as a free download to PMI members… but if you’re the type of person who, like me, prefers a physical copy, it’s worth it. You can purchase it on Amazon – this is an affiliate link and supports me if you use it to purchase.)
If you are attending a job interview for a PM-related role, you should have a passing familiarity with the PMBOK. Nobody has it memorized, but a hiring manager will want to see this familiarity if you’re claiming knowledge and experience of PM as a profession.
Do I HAVE to get credentialed?
No. Unequivocally no – you do NOT have to get credentialed in order to start a job in project management.
(Note – when we’re discussing “credentials”, I’m almost always referring to the Project Management Professional credential, which you’ll see called the PMP. The PMP is globally recognized as the gold standard for Project Management credentials, and in my experience is the only PM cert that’s recognizable by folks outside the field. Depending on your professional goals, that may make it the only one worth pursuing. If not, PMI does offer the Certified Associate in Project Management, which is more of a beginner cert. This might make sense if you’re applying to jobs where folks have lots of familiarity with project management as a field and are likely to recognize the credential, and you have less time and money available than you’d need to apply for the full PMP.)
In any event, you do not need a certification or credential to pivot into many entry-level project management roles. In fact, many roles will frame it similarly to how CPAs are hired – with the expectation that you complete your credential, on the company’s dime, within the first year of hire.
Now, that being said, there are definitely some situations where it might be easier to get your foot into a certain door depending on whether you’re credentialed. For example, if you happen to be interviewing with a hiring manager that cares very much about whether their teams are credentialed project managers who can “hit the ground running”, it may put you at a disadvantage to be interviewed without a credential. In my experience this happens in organizations where there are few project managers, and the PMs that do exist are expected to advocate for themselves and their own professional development.
If that sounds intimidating… it might just mean that this is not the job for you! It’s OK to prioritize a job at the front of your pivot that supports new project managers extensively.
Keep in mind, too, that getting credentialed is NOT the same as receiving project management education. For example, the Google Project Management Professional Certificate is pretty low-cost — $39/mo after a free 7-day trial period — and, should you ever decide to pursue credentialing, will count toward the educational hours you need to submit to apply for the credential.
If you know you’ll be pursuing the PMP, I’d go beyond something like the Google Project Management cert and do a course with live instruction. I am a formal referral partner with MindsparQ®, and they also offer a guarantee that students will pass their exam. Use the code CAROLINE10 to receive 10% off your registration!
Okay, but SHOULD I get credentialed?
Haha – you are after my own heart 🙂 My own answer is that in general, I wouldn’t pursue the PMP unless it was funded by an employer. It’s expensive – you need to pay for (at a minimum) the exam prep (required to test) and the exam itself, plus any other resources you’re looking for (coaching, etc).
That said, remember that project management principles are absolutely transferable to Higher Ed/Student Affairs roles. Project management certification is a wonderful use of professional development dollars even if you are not planning to leave the field. Formal PM education will make you more efficient and more effective as a programmatic leader on your campus – and it may even provide you with some new ideas and approaches for work you’re already doing! (Click here for a free guide to Project Management Principles for SA Pros.)
If you’re having a hard time getting your employer to pay for your credential, know that you don’t need a cert to land many entry-level PM jobs (many of which are still going to be a step up from SA jobs), and that if you’re doing full-time professional PM work, most employers will work with you to pay for a credential once you’ve already begun working.
So, the upshot here is – if you can get someone else to pay for your credential, I’d go for it, but I probably wouldn’t pursue it if I was paying out of my own pocket. If I were in this boat, and choosing to defer becoming certified, I would definitely consider pursuing free education through Google, Coursera, Udemy, or other sources – all of which will be at least applicable, if not transferable, to any credential you pursue later on.
Anything else?
I’d close by just reminding you to stay curious. I have found project management to be an exceptionally welcoming field. I also don’t know ANYONE who began their career wanting to become a project manager – we all found the field along the way. Just like you! 🙂 So please do ask if there’s ever anything else you want to know – otherwise, I hope this guide has been helpful!
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