CAPM Foundations

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Overview

The GoSkills CAPM® Foundations course is ideal for beginners or those needing a refresher on the fundamentals of project management. The foundational knowledge covered in this course is essential for anyone wanting to pursue a CAPM credential or start a project management career.

In this CAPM Foundations course, you will learn the most commonly used principles, tools and techniques for effective project management. By the end of the course, you will understand which tools are most commonly used, how to apply them successfully on your projects, and how to avoid some of the typical errors.

The skills you learn in this course can help enhance your value to current and future employers, serve as a stepping stone in your project management career, and give you the confidence and knowledge you need to work more efficiently as part of a project team.

If your goal is to become a Certified Associate in Project Management, this course is a great starting point. Once you have mastered the tools and techniques in this Foundations course, we recommend taking the CAPM Certification Training course, which is specifically focused on CAPM exam topics. This powerful duo will give you the knowledge required to pass your exam with flying colors.

In this course, you will learn:

  • The principles and tools normally used when planning a project.
  • The best practices for execution and control of your project plan. 
  • The elements of a project risk management plan including risk analysis and risk response.
  • The agile and adaptive approaches in project management used to manage uncertainty. 
  • How to integrate the activities of project team members across all knowledge areas and project phases.
  • When tailoring is required to project deliverables, timing and resources and how this will affect the project scope or quality.
  • How continuous improvement affects project management today.

This course provides 28 project management education hours or PDUs to maintain your certification. GoSkills is a PMI Authorized Training Partner (ATP).

Once enrolled, our friendly support team and tutors are here to help with any course related inquiries.


FAQ

If you would like to prepare for the CAPM certification exam, but you need to learn the basics of project management first, this course is for you.

This course is ideal for anyone who needs a solid foundation in the essentials of project management, specifically focused on the required knowledge for CAPM.

Once you have mastered the tools and techniques in this Foundations course, we recommend taking the GoSkills CAPM Certification Training course which is specifically designed to prepare you for the exam.

Yes, the GoSkills CAPM Foundations course provides 28 project management education hours, or 28 PDUs to maintain your certification. This surpasses the CAPM certification requirements of at least 23 hours of project management education. GoSkills is a PMI Authorized Training Partner (ATP).

Gaining a CAPM certification can enhance your career options and even boost your salary. Not only will you learn how to better work within a project team and improve your project management skills, CAPM is an industry recognized certification worldwide. As CAPM is suitable for individuals without a lot of project management experience, it’s a great way to get your foot in the door by proving your expertise to employers.

  1. Meet PMI’s prerequisites for CAPM certification of:
    • Secondary degree (high school diploma, associate’s degree or global equivalent)
    • 23 hours of project management education completed by the time you sit for the exam (this course provides 28 hours of project management education).
  2. Study for the CAPM exam.
    • Take an online course like GoSkills’ CAPM Certification Training course, complete with exercises and quiz questions to test your knowledge. It is also helpful to review PMI’s CAPM Handbook, and the PMBOK® Guide—Sixth Edition.
  3. Pay the PMI CAPM exam fee and take the CAPM exam.
    • This can be an in-person Center-based exam, or an online proctored exam.
    • The exam has 150 questions, and you have three hours to complete it.
  4. Maintain your certification by retaking the exam every five years.

As of August 28, 2019, PMI has removed the work experience requirement. Prior to this change, PMI required 1500 hours of work experience to qualify.

Your CAPM certification can help you demonstrate your expertise and value to employers, and boost your salary. Project managers who hold a CAPM certification can earn more than their non-certified colleagues. According to recent PayScale data, the average salary for a CAPM certification holder in the United States is $66,000. As CAPM is an entry-level certification, the more practical experience you gain will help set you up for more lucrative positions.

It is not necessarily about which certification is better, but rather which is more suitable for you at this stage of your career.

The PMP certification is suitable for more experienced project managers who already have 3-5 years of experience leading projects, a secondary degree or four-year degree (this varies depending on your years of project management experience), and 35 hours of project management education.

If you meet these requirements, we would recommend you go for the PMP certification, and prep for the exam with the GoSkills PMP® Certification Training course. As the prerequisites are more advanced, the exam topics are more in-depth than for CAPM.

The CAPM certification is ideal for individuals without a lot of project management experience wanting to kickstart their careers and showcase their knowledge to potential employers. If you are new to project management or you do not yet have the necessary work experience, CAPM is a better choice to build up your credentials.

Once you have obtained your CAPM certification, you can gain more project management experience and take the PMP exam at a later date if you choose to.

GoSkills is a member of the PMI ATP Program. To earn the PMI Authorized Training Partner designation, a provider must meet rigorous standards for quality and effectiveness. By training with GoSkills, you can be confident that your course content and instructors meet the highest quality standards.

GoSkills offers a range of project management courses online. All of our project management courses allow you to earn contact hours and PDUs to put towards certification with PMI.

Absolutely. We work with many businesses, big and small, to train and upskill their staff. Get started here or contact us with your requirements.


Summary

Skill level: Beginner
Certificate: Yes
Lessons: 56
Pre-requisites: None
Video duration: 5h 06m
Estimated study time: 28h for all materials

Accreditations and approvals



Syllabus

1

Triple Constraint

Understand the inter-relationship between the triple constraints on a project of scope, schedule, and resources.

2

Try it!

Circles of Project Management

Circles of project management are a framework for considering different project management aspects.  Based upon project and organizational considerations, some aspects may be emphasized and others de-emphasized.

3

Project Leader

Know the role and responsibilities of the project leader.

4

Core Team

Most large projects are managed by a cross-functional core team.  Core team members have a dual responsibility; they are responsible for the project achieving its goals and they are responsible to ensure that the project complies with their function’s standards and best practices.

5

Project Lifecycle

Understand the phases of a project lifecycle and know how to approach a predictive project versus an adaptive project.

6

Project, Program, Portfolio, Operations

Portfolios are often comprised of programs which are often comprised of projects; all of which either create or support operations.

1

Try it!

In-Frame and Out-of-Frame

In-Frame/Out-of-Frame is a technique for clarifying project boundaries by listing the activities and deliverables that are in scope for the project as well as the activities that are not required as part of the project.

2

Project Charter

The Project Charter is the document that approves the initiation of the project and identifies goals, objectives, boundaries and constraints.

1

Phases

Projects are often organized into phases.  Phases provide structure and logic to the project and aid the project team and management to track progress.

2

Progressive Elaboration

Progressive elaboration is the principle of steadily adding detail to the project plan as more information becomes available.

3

Baseline Plan

The integrated project plan that includes scope, schedule, and resource information for all aspects of the project is the project baseline plan.

4

Change Planning

The unique nature of projects leads to an inherent level of uncertainty.  Project managers should expect and plan for project change.

5

Integration and the Project Manager

A critical role of the project manager is to integrate the activities of the project team members across all knowledge areas and throughout the project phases. The Project Manager is the only individual who has that scope of responsibility

6

Try it!

Adaptive and Agile Approaches

Many projects are initiated with significant aspects of uncertainty. The adaptive approach is ideally suited to manage uncertainty during the project and the Agile methodology is the most common adaptive approach in use.

7

Tailoring Scope and Quality

Traditional projects often require tailoring during planning and adaptive projects require tailoring throughout the life of the project. When tailoring is required with respect to the deliverables, it will affect the project scope or quality.

8

Tailoring Schedule and Resources

Traditional projects often require tailoring during planning and adaptive projects require tailoring throughout the life of the project. The tailoring is often with respect to the timing of project events or the resources - both internal and external - assigned to complete those events.

1

Deliverables Deployment

Learn how to identify project tasks and activities using the deliverables deployment technique.

2

Scope Statement

The project scope statement is a summary description of the project scope used to maintain alignment between stakeholders and team members.

3

WBS Dictionary

The WBS Dictionary is a table or spreadsheet that is organized by project task and contains all project planning details.

4

WBS Structure

The Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) is the most commonly used technique for organizing the project scope.  The WBS decomposes the scope into tasks and organizes the tasks into logical groupings.

1

Network Diagram

A network diagram is a project scheduling technique that shows the relationship between tasks by depicting project activities as a flowchart.

2

Critical Path

Critical Path is a project scheduling technique that determines the shortest time that the current project plan can be completed.

1

Project Budget

Understand what is normally shown in a project budget.  Learn how to create a time-phased project budget.

2

Resource List

The project Resource List is a list of all individuals working on the project with their contact information and all special equipment and facilities required to accomplish project tasks.

3

Responsibility Matrix

The Responsibility Matrix is a project management tool for correlating project work assignments with project team members.

4

Contractor Vendor Planning

Contractors, vendors, and suppliers are used on projects to reduce risks.  These external resources have capacity and capability that allows them to complete project tasks better than internal resources would be able to complete them.

5

Resource Over-Allocation

Project resource demands are often inconsistent throughout the life of the project leading to times when resources are over-allocated.

6

Earned Value Planning

Earned Value Management is a comprehensive project management technique that combines scope, schedule and resource management into one set of measures.  It starts with task level planning.

1

Estimating Uncertainty

Project plans are built with an accumulation of estimates, each of which has a level of uncertainty associated with it.  The level of uncertainty is a major contributor to the accuracy of the plan and the amount of project risk.

2

Time-Box Estimating

Time Boxes are an estimating technique that sets a finite time for a task or task group.  The amount of scope that is completed is variable.   Whatever scope is done when the time box ends is the amount of scope for that activity on the project.

1

Positive and Negative Risk

Understand the difference between positive and negative risk.  Learn the major steps of project risk management. 

2

Risk Register

The Risk Register is a table that tracks the project risk management activities.

3

Risk Matrix

All project risks are not equal in their effect on a project.  Project risks that have been identified are prioritized using qualitative techniques such as the Risk Matrix.  

4

Negative Risk Response

Negative Risk Response is determining what actions the project will take to address risk threats.

5

Positive Risk Response

Positive Risk Response is determining what actions the project will take to address risk opportunities.

6

Contingencies and Triggers

Contingencies are potential risk response actions that will only be implemented if some triggering event or condition has shown that the risk probability has gone from unlikely to likely.

1

Team Building

Learn the characteristics of a project core team and understand the stages of a  team building lifecycle.

2

Project Decision-Making

Project Decision Making is the process whereby the project leader and project team decide upon project strategy, tactics, and acceptable actions.  For Project Stakeholders, the decisions normally concern project boundaries.  For Project Core Team members, the decisions normally concern project plans and execution.

3

Team Meetings

Team Meetings are a gathering of team members to discuss aspects of the project.  Team pulse meetings focus on status.  Team problem solving meetings focus on problem resolution.

4

Task Accountability

Task Accountability is the project management activity associated with ensuring successful completion of project activities.

5

Quality Control & Quality Assurance

Quality Control and Quality Assurance are processes used for managing the project.  Quality Control determines if the overall project result meets the requirements and Quality Assurance determines if appropriate standards and procedures are used to do the work of the project.

6

Contractors and Vendors Execution

Contractors and vendors are often used to accomplish project tasks.  The complexity, uniqueness, and uncertainty of the activity will determine the nature of the relationship between the project team and the contractor or vendor.

7

Communication Management

Understand the characteristics of the major categories of project communication.  Know the communication constraints typically encountered on project. 

8

PMIS and Project Management Software

The Project Management Information System (PMIS) is the method that the project manager and core team use to share and disseminate project information.  It often is based upon the use of a project management software application.

9

Setting Earned Value

Earned Value Management is a comprehensive project management technique that combines scope, schedule and resource management into one set of measures.  An element, in fact the element that provides the name of the technique, is the setting of Earned Value.

10

Continuous Improvement

With the speed of change in business today, project management must be continually improving to stay practical and relevant. This includes both correcting problems and adopting new approaches.

1

Dashboards

Learn how to create and use a project dashboard to communicate project status with both management and your project team.

2

Management Reviews

Understand the purpose of a project management review and learn how to prepare for one.

3

Scope Creep

Scope creep is the uncontrolled expansion to project scope without adjustments to time, cost, and resources.

4

Issue Resolution

Issues are any request, complaint, or unexpected condition that leads to unplanned, but in scope, work that must be accomplished on a project.  They normally result in the need to implement a workaround in order to resolve them.

5

Project Change

A formal documented process for changing the project baseline.

6

Variance Analysis

Variance occurs when the actual situation is different from the planned or expected situation.  In projects, variance analysis applies to schedule variance and cost variance.  It determines both why the actual situation is different than what was planned and the impact that will have on the project.

7

Forecasting

Since projects seldom go exactly as planned, part way through a project the project team is typically asked to estimate how much time and money are required to complete the project.

1

Stakeholder Acceptance

Understand how to gain stakeholder acceptance during project closeout and learn how to create and use a Punch List.

2

Lessons Learned

Lessons Learned are a retrospective look at a project, or phase of a project, to identify best practices to be repeated and performance gaps to be improved.

3

Administrative Closeout

In addition to transitioning the result of the project into the organization’s operations, projects often have accounts, systems, and resources that must be closed or disposed of before the project is fully closed.

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