Practical Certification in Project Management: The three dimensions of competency
The Project Manager Competency Development Framework (PMCDF) of the Project Management Institute (PMIĀ®) describes the knowledge, performance and personal competencies needed to manage projects effectively. The Practical Certification Programme (PCP) supports your development in all three dimensions.
Knowledge
Knowledge refers to what you know about applying Project Management processes, tools and techniques in project.
Regular Project Management training is designed only to provide the knowledge component, enabling you to pass an exam. But exams don’t necessarilyĀ test knowledge, and passing an exam doesnāt attest to your ability to do the job. In fact, in a survey about the value of the PMIĀ®‘s PMPĀ® certification, the āresults indicated that PMPĀ® certification was the least valued of 15 core competencies and that there was no difference in project success rates between PMPĀ®-certified project managers and uncertified project managers.ā
Read in context at:
Starkweather, J. & Stevenson, D. H. (2011). PMPĀ® Certification as a Core Competency: Necessary But Not Sufficient. Project Management Journal, 42(1), 31ā41
The PMIĀ® explains that āin order to be recognised as fully competent, a project manager must satisfy each of these three dimensions.ā
Performance
Performance describes how you apply the knowledge to meet the requirements of real projects.
The Practical Certification Programme (PCP) is different from PMPĀ® exam preparation training, because it is designed to help you in your actual work.
In Module 3 of theĀ PCP, you work with your own real projects, and produce a portfolio of evidence showing what you’ve managed to achieve using your specific skills. Your Practical Certificate is therefore customised to attest to the nature of your own work, and as such is not a one-size-fits-all standards-based certificate. It includes a report by a SAQA-accredited Assessor.
The PCP references standards such as the PMBOKĀ® Guide and PRINCE2Ā®, and it includes an international exam, but this exam is not the main focusĀ of the programme. The PCP isĀ different, relevant and remarkable, and takes a uniquely personalised approach to outcomes-based certification.
Personal
Personal competencies can be seen in how you behave when doing the actual work in a project environment.
Naturally, employers and clients are explicitly seeking project managers and support staff who have the necessary performance and personal attributes! Developing those attributes means changing yourĀ thinking and behaviour. It is in Module 2 of the PCP particularly where you will start working on this area.