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Here is everything you need to pass your PMP
Here are some links to my materials that students use to pass the PMP. Here is a link to my Live PMP Bootcamp: "This course is great for folks who like direct instructor interaction and feedback." https://www.tiaedu.com/training_pmp_course_nyc.html Here is a link to my e-learning or live PMP coaching class. "Pass your PMP exam in 30 days!" https://tiaexams.com/pmcourses Check out my exam simulator: "Think you're ready to take on the PMP? Prove it with exam like questions and video explanations." https://tiaexams.com/pmcourses Check out my exam ebook PMP Exam Prep Simplified: "The same detailed book in a convenient digital format." https://tiaexams.com/pmcourses Check out my PMP Cram Course: "A quick refresher right before the exam?" https://tiaexams.com/pmcourses Check out my 60 PDU PMP Renewal Course: "One-stop-shop for PMP renewal qualification." https://tiaexams.com/bundle/60-pdu-bundle Here is a link to my Amazon Study Guide: "My bestselling study guide. Comes with a free 35 PDU PMP course." https://www.amazon.com/PMP-Exam-Prep-Simplified-Learning/dp/B08SBFTXQT/ Here is a link to my Youtube Channel: "See all the latest PMP from me and live weekly Q&A." https://www.youtube.com/c/AndrewRamdayal -AR
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Passed my PMP exam today AT/AT/T
Thanks @Andrew Ramdayal for your course and videos.
My Experience with PMP
Hi everyone, I’d like to share my experience with preparing for and taking the PMP exam. I started with Andrew’s PMP course on Udemy, which I found quite helpful. But once I began reading his book, I realized it was much more helpful ☺️. I’d absolutely recommend focusing more on the book than the online course. I think I went through the book 5–8 times until I had everything memorized. I also answered all the questions in the book—not because they prepare you directly for the PMP exam, but because they help you check whether you’ve properly memorized the chapter content. When I started using PMI Study Hall and took my first mini test, I ran into a big issue: I was either wrong or unsure about almost every question. That’s when I realized I had memorized everything but hadn’t developed the right mindset. So I turned to Andrew’s video on the 200 PMI questions. I watched about 50 of them, and they gave me a lot of insight into how to approach the questions—especially how to eliminate options effectively. Then I went back to Study Hall and treated it as a learning tool rather than an evaluation. I didn’t take any full exams at that point because I wanted to save them for later. I strongly recommend using Copilot to help interpret the questions and answers—especially early on, when the explanations in Study Hall can be a bit hard to digest. After completing all the mini exams and reviewing them, I moved on to the full exams; you can see my scores in another post I made here. On exam days, I woke up at 8 a.m., started at 9 a.m., and tackled the questions in three sections with two 10-minute breaks. I even paid attention to what I ate and drank during the exam. I took the full exams with one or two days break in between. What helped me most on exam day was keeping things simple. Don’t overthink the questions—just read and go with the first answer that comes to mind. Yes, you might get some wrong, but it’s better than diving too deep and second-guessing everything, in my opinion. If you overanalyze, every option can start to look correct.
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