Glad I did though because a PhD stays with you when certification fads have run their course (pun intended). I vote for PRINCE2 but see what suits you:
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for govt contracting yes, but I will tell you that I have an office full of PMP that don't know shit and don't even manage. They are glorified admin assistants.
NP. Not surprised. Still trying to figure out what value add our Project Manager brings to the project. Though I do partly blame the company for assigning folks to manage projects where they have no actual experience with the technology involved.
I am assuming you are technicAl. Would you rather be managing the tasks , schedule, estimating & allocating hours, collaborating with other teams, reporting status to various levels, running financial reports and managing budgets and metrics yourself? That's what a Project Manager does.
No. But that may be the problem - our Project Manager doesn't seem to know enough to do a decent job at managing tasks, schedules or estimates either. I equate it to building a house - while a good general contractor will sub out significant portions (if not all) of the work, they will be knowledgeable enough about the process to understand what work is required in the jobs they are subbing out. You can't just hire an IT project manager to oversee your building project and expect things to run as well as they would with a PM who actually understands the process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for govt contracting yes, but I will tell you that I have an office full of PMP that don't know shit and don't even manage. They are glorified admin assistants.
NP. Not surprised. Still trying to figure out what value add our Project Manager brings to the project. Though I do partly blame the company for assigning folks to manage projects where they have no actual experience with the technology involved.
I am assuming you are technicAl. Would you rather be managing the tasks , schedule, estimating & allocating hours, collaborating with other teams, reporting status to various levels, running financial reports and managing budgets and metrics yourself? That's what a Project Manager does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for govt contracting yes, but I will tell you that I have an office full of PMP that don't know shit and don't even manage. They are glorified admin assistants.
NP. Not surprised. Still trying to figure out what value add our Project Manager brings to the project. Though I do partly blame the company for assigning folks to manage projects where they have no actual experience with the technology involved.
Anonymous wrote:for govt contracting yes, but I will tell you that I have an office full of PMP that don't know shit and don't even manage. They are glorified admin assistants.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, PMPs are a "tick the box" item for gov't contracting