Post-Mortem on my PMP exam on 7 December 2001:
"No guts, no glory" worked for me and it was a very good thing. I can share this without breaking the NDA, because I can't remember more than a handful of actual questions anyway, and won't mention them verbatim. It was a very grueling experience and not one that I am eager to repeat anytime soon. I was under the (mistaken) impression that one would be able to go back and review each question at the end, so I only marked three that had me really confused. By the end of the first hour, I had answered 115 questions and was still able to click the "Previous" and "Next" buttons, to migrate back and forth. So I took a short bio-break, walked around a little bit in the cold [for Tucson, 45 degrees, Brrrr] air to clear my mind, came back in and churned through the rest of the two hundred, thinking that I would be done by the end of hour two and have two hours to leisurely go back through and revisit all of the situation questions. Sure enough, I finished in two hours. Plenty of time left on the clock, so rather than using the "Previous" button to walk back through the questions, I opted to "Review" instead. Imagine my suprise, when I could only review the three marked questions, none of which did I change. There is a button marked "Go to Question" and a text box to enter a number, but it was grayed out and did not work. I suspect it is intended to allow you to jump directly to a specific marked question only. Thus I didn't get to review anything anyway. :-( [I did get a little emphatic on the uselessness of this button on the post test survey that PMI requests we fill out.] Moral of this story is "Mark everything you may want to revisit".
So with my heart in my throat, I ended the test and beheld that blessed word PASS appearing at the bottom of my report. I think Elizabeth may concur that this generated a most exhilarating feeling. ;-) I was shooting for >= 190/200 to win the free class from Rita Mulcahy of RMC Project, but fell a little short. In a P/F environment, it really doesn't matter, but I did pass the exam in two hours with a comfortable margin. All those nights of endless reading and study have paid off. I am pretty sure that I nailed all of the definition and formulae related questions, I had that stuff down cold, probably as a result of the PMP Exam Prep class, a wise investment IMHO. What I believe I missed were some of the situational questions that seek the PMI-ism as the correct answer. This is a case where my own experience may have worked against me, as I answered the ones where I couldn't determine what PMI considers the correct answer through my personal filters.
When I got home, I analyzed the report to see where I fell short. I was gratified that I didn't blow any particular area, just missed a couple here and there from all of the PMBOK Knowledge areas. This reinforces my opinion that the situational material is where I had difficulty. Not a major problem, since I am comfortable that I will be able to work through real-life situations with aplomb. I have already seen the improvement in my current and recently finished projects as a result of implementing the tools and practices I have learned as a result of chasing the PMP and expect it to be of great benefit in the future. Be looking for me in the list of December PMPs on the PMI website.
Good luck to all and hang in there, it's a tough road, but a merry one at the end.
Joseph Baugh, PMP