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the beginning of the exam to write down important points on paper. This allows you
to legally copy. The idea is to avoid confusion, and allow quick access to information
reducing time taken to answer questions and answer more questions correctly.
If you are taking PBT (paper based test), you will not be allowed to write braind-ump
down on paper (because you dont get 15minutes to familiarize with exam software
interface). However the exercise of pulling together important points on to a paper
serves the purpose of revision. So my advice is not to skip this important exercise.
Just to reiterate, here are few points you need to keep in mind
about brain dump.
a) Brain dump may consist of the following
formulas
list of names
mnemonics, doodles, or mindmap(s)
complete names of gurus (you may get questions with wrong first name in the
options, for instance John Juran)
anything that you find difficult to remember
b) Write formulas even if you know them well. It just saves the time to recall them
during the exam and might avoid an occasional confusion
c) Write important things from PMBOK syllabus first, followed by points related
to outside areas discovered during practice exams. This is because if you are
not able to complete brain-dump in the stipulated time window then you end up
leaving out low risk points. This is better than leaving out things from syllabus, like
formulas. I got to write only about 65% of my brain-dump during the 13 minutes I got.
d) You dont need to have a structure to your brain-dump. The goal is to write
down as much of it as possible during the short time window of 10-12minsyou get
just before the exam begins
e) Start creating your brain-dump in the last week leading up to your exam. This is
when you are pretty much done with the studies and grey areas are apparent.
f) Download brain-dump on to the scratch paper given to you at Prometric center,
during the 15 minutes window you get to understand exam software interface.
Tip: Make sure you have enough space left on the scratch paper to do actual
calculations after writing brain-dump, because if you ask for another paper Prometric
staff will take away the first one!
Remember that your typical brain-dump is very terse, lot of it would make sense only
to you. Just to illustrate the point, here is my brain dump. You may have to connect
dots at few places to make sense out of it, and this is how it looks. Make sure you
create your own brain dump, which would be most beneficial to you.
Here we go.
Note: This is a crudely formatted one. The reason is because that is how brain dump
is. Jotted in a matter of minutes on a piece of paper. Since even I cannot understand
my handwriting well, I am typing my brain-dump instead of showing a picture of it
written on a piece of paper.
EV = BAC * % complete
EV = PV * % complete (any point during project execution)
EV=BCWP (budgeted cost of work performed)
PV=BCWS (budgeted cost of work scheduled)
AC=ACWP (actual cost of work performed)
SV = EV-PV > 0 is good
SPI = EV/PV > 1 is ahead of schedule
CV = EV-AC > 0 is good
CPI = EV/AC > 1 is under budget
PV = SV/(SPI-1)
AC = CV/(CPI-1)
EAC = AC/%Complete
ETC = EAC AC :assuming work goes as per plan
ETC = BAC EV
VAC = BAC EAC
%VAC = VAC/BAC * 100
TCPI = (BAC-EV)/(BAC-AC) : accepting BAC value
TCPI = work remaining/funds remaining
TCPI = (BAC-EV)/(EAC-AC) : when BAC is not sufficient and EAC is calculated
TCPI > 1 is bad
-
Expected Monitory value: EMV=Impact*Probability
-
Communication channels = N*(N-1)/2
7% of communication message is contained in words
38% in vocal pitch
55% in body language
Albert Mehrabians book Silent Message
-
TEAM stages Tuckman (Jensen) Ladder
forming
storming
norming
performing
adjourning
Future value & Present value
-
FV = PV (1+r)^N : r=rate of interest, N=number of time periods
PV = FV/(1+r)^N
NPV : higher the better
NPV > 0 investment will add value, accept the project
Internal rate of return, IRR : Bigger the better
Benefit Cost Ration, BCR : Bigger the better
Payback period: Lesser the better : This is nothing but Breakeven period
Payback period=Net investment/Avg annual cash flow
-
Probability distribution
Hertzbergs highgyene-motivation
Maslows hierarchy of needs
McGregor Theory X, Y; / Z(assurance of permanent job position)
McClellands Need Theory
Victor Vroom Expectance theory
Network diagram
PDPC
Matrix diagram
Affinity diagram
Prioritization Metrics
Interrelationship digraphs
Tree diagram
7 Basic Quality Tools (See See See, Husband and Father Playing Soccer)
Check sheet
Control chart
Cause-and-effect diagram
Histogram
Flow chart
Pareto chart
Scatter diagram
type II error beta risk
ACTIVITY ON ARROW/arrow diagramming method
McKinseys 7Ss Robert H. Waterman, Jr. and Tom Peters
Hard Elements
Strategy
Structure
Systems
Soft Elements
Shared Values
Skills
Style
Staff
7 reasons of conflicts on projects
-
schedule
project priorities
human resources
technical opinions and performance trade-offs
administrative procedures
persnality conflict
cost and budget
Conflict management style
-
withdraw/avoid
compromise
smoothen/accomodate
collaborating
confront/problem solving
force
Collaborating: win/win;
Compromising: win some/lose some; >> lose/lose
Accommodating: lose/win;
Competing: win/lose;
Avoiding: no winners/no losers
Test of Normality
Paired Comparison Analysis
opm3
managemet by objective
capability maturity model
tqm
Merrill and Reid in their employee motivation theory?
personality traits: driver, expressive, amiable, and analytical.
Joseph Juran:applied the Pareto principle to quality issues
Jurans Trilogy: quality planning, quality control, and quality improvement.
W. Edwards Deming
PDCA along with Shewart
Philips Crosby DIRFT (4 principles)
The definition of quality is conformance to requirements (requirements meaning both
the product and the customers requirements)
The system of quality is prevention
The performance standard is zero defects (relative to requirements)
The measurement of quality is the price of nonconformance
Vilfredo Federico Damaso Pareto
80-20 principle
Kaoru Ishikawa
root-cause diagram: fishbone
KJ Diagram ()
Brainstorming
Idea/mind mapping
Nominal technique
Affinity diagrams
Multi-criteria decision analysis
Failure mode and effect analysis FMEA
QFD quality function deployment (type of Facilitated workshops)
Discrete, Apportioned, Level of Effort EMV effort types
marginal analysis
lifecycle costing
demings 14 points?
ARMA>
zero sum processing
issue log
shannon-weaver model of communication
Thats about it. This may look a lengthy one, but when you write one for yourself it
certainly doesnt feel long. Moreover, you write even briefly on paper. The only point
to keep in mind is to practice the brain-dump couple of times a day during the last
week leading up to your PMP exam. The more you practice, the easier it is to write
on paper in shortest time, and more confident you will feel during the exam!
Heres a bonus tip write the points in descending order of importance to you
(ideally all formulas should be written down first), so if you end up not being able to
put down everything on paper, youll miss only least important points.
So, thats the secret to feel good and do good during the exam!