P3O® Practitioner Upgrade

Facilitating Effective Project Delivery with P3O

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

During the recent years, many techniques such as Lean Six Sigma, TOGAF® and PRINCE2® have come up that help the project managers to maintain the projects in their organisations. The latest addition to these is the P3O. Portfolio, Programme and Project Offices is designed to help project managers by making them aware of the knowledge of principles, procedures and techniques. This further helps the project managers in delivering focused support structures. The structures provided by this knowledge help to remove any planning and implementation differences and as such bring about a better product at the end of the day.

  • Learn about a framework most desired by Project Managers

  • Facilitate effective delivery of projects using P3O

  • Learn about the roles and responsibilities required to carry P3O services

  • Understand the P3O value matrix

PREREQUISITES

The candidate must have passed the P3O Foundation exam and should be in possession of the said certification before sitting for the P3O Practitioner Certification Exam.

TARGET AUDIENCE

The course is targeted in the high management domain such as the Head of Portfolio Office and Portfolio Specialists, Programme and Project Office Managers and staff, Center of Excellence Managers and staff. The following personnel are the most suitable candidates for this course:

  • Senior managers who want to understand the structures that will help in bringing business
  • Senior Managers, Programme and Project Managers who wish to add value and improve the delivery of tactical business change, aids and competence
  • Managers for creating structures that help in project delivery and mechanisms within their business
  • Skilled portfolio or programme office managers who need to review, refresh or modify current portfolio or programme office provision
  • Portfolio office or programme office staff who want to know the significance of their role
  • Programme/project assurance staff

WHAT WILL YOU LEARN?

  • Customising a P3O model within a an organisation by selecting a case study
  • Discuss the values that a P3O implementation can bring to a company at the Practitioner level
  • P3O tools and techniques and their application at the Practitioner level
  • Practitioner exam preparation

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

P3O alias Portfolio, Programme and Projects Offices is a globally valid regulation issued by the Office of Government Commerce, a department in the UK Government, that helps organisations around the globe to build support configurations enabling the effective provision of their collections of projects and change programmes. P3O list out the factors which influence designing and building the right configurations to optimize.

The P3O offers certification at two levels namely the Foundation and Practitioner. Only when a delegate has acquired the Foundation certification can he/she sit for the Practitioner exam. AXELOS has accredited various Examination Institutes who further accredit Authorized Training Organization to conduct training for these certifications. The delegates can achieve this certification in two ways. First, the candidate could attend a course at one of the ATO’s and then appear for the exam on the last day of the course. Alternatively, the candidate could prepare for the course privately also and then appear directly for the certification exam without having to sit for the course in the ATO.

The Practitioner training is based on case studies that help the delegates to prepare for the practitioner certification exam. The course comprises of sessions that a delegate can use to revise the concepts of the P3O Practitioner course along with sample questions that help the delegate to understand:

  • The principles, functions, processes, and services listed in the P3O Guide
  • The tools and techniques as detailed in the P3O Guide
  • Application of a P3O model in different environments for a specific scenario

PROGRAM CONTENT

  • Introducing the P3O Practitioner
    • Introductions
    • Course structure
    • Course goal
    • Course objectives
  • The P3O Method – An Overview
  • Various Models and Customising
  • Need for P3O
  • Execute and Revive
  • P3O – The Tools and Techniques
  • P3O Practitioner Exam Preparation
    • Use APMG Sample Questions to review and practice P3O methodology
    • Apply the concepts in practice using sample project case-study scenarios
  • P3O Practitioner Exam

P3O® Practitioner Upgrade Enquiry

 

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Reach us at 0121 368 7851 or info@msptraining.com for more information.

ABOUT Dundee

By area, Dundee is the 4th largest in Scotland and 51st largest in the entire United Kingdom by population. It is one of the 32 council that the government of Scotland uses for administration. Initially, Dundee was a trading post, but with rapid developments taking place during the Industrial Revolution, it became a centre of the jute industry worldwide.  Dundee earned the sobriquet “the city of jute, jam and journalism" due to its industries of jam and journalism besides the jute industry.

Dundee has also earned itself another title "One City, Many Discoveries". This has been primarily because of the various scientific activities and because of the RRS Discovery (now standing at the Discovery Point). The RRS Discovery, a  Robert Falcon Scott's Antarctic exploration vessel, was built in Dundee. Besides, Dundee is also home to various other industries such as Biomedical and technological. United Kingdom’s  digital-entertainment industry generates  10%  of the revenue from Dundee alone.

The two universities, the Abertay University and the University of Dundee, are located in Dundee. The United Nations in 2014 recognised Dundee as the UK's first UNESCO City of Design. This again was due to its different contributions to fields such as entertainment and medical research.

Dundee has two football clubs also, Dundee United and Dundee F.C., who have their stadiums where they play their home games. All these stadiums are placed away from each other.

As the revenues from the traditional industry declined, the city planned to develop the tourism aspect of Dundee.  The plan which would cost £1 billion was started as early as 2001 and will be completed within 30 years. Also being developed within Dundee are the Dundee Victoria & Albert Museum which are expected to be inaugurated by 2018. The cost of this museum is estimated at £80 million.

Landmarks

The city landscape is dominated by a large hill called The Law and a firth called the Firth of Tay. The Law was the site of an Iron Age Hill Fort, where the soldiers who had laid down their lives in World War I were commemorated. The waterfront, which has changed a lot due to natural forces acting upon it since the 19th century, is still home to several docks that were at one time used for importing and exporting jute and whale products. The HMS Unicorn and the North Carr Lightship are stationed at The Victoria while the RRS Discovery of  Captain Scott is stationed at Craig Pier. The Craig Peer also is used by ferries to Fife.

 

The city is home to a 15th-century building, the St. Mary’s Tower, that is considered to be the oldest in the city. The Tower is a part of the City Churches that include St Clement's Church, Old St Paul's and St David's Church, and St Mary's Church. The other churches in the city that carry historical value are the Roman Catholic Cathedral of St Andrew and the Gothic Revival Episcopal Cathedral of St Paul's.

Castles

Dundee is home to several castles most of which belong to the Early Modern Era.

  • The Mains Castle, located in the Caird Park, had its earliest parts built in 1562 by David Graham.
  • Another castle, the Dudhope Castle, which is considered to be the seat of the Scrymgeour family was built in late 16th century on the site of a keep.
  • Claypotts Castle, a castle in West Ferry, was built in the latter half of the 16th century by John Strachan.
  • The Broughtly Castle was built in 1495 and served military purposes until 1932. The castle served in the Anglo-Scottish Wars and the Wars of the Three Kingdoms as well. The castle stands alongside two different kinds of beaches – one of sand, the other of pebbles - on a shallow tip that projects into the Firth.
  • The Powrie Castle has only the ruins left from its 16th-century structure. It stands to the north of Fintry.

 

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