P3O® Re Registration

Upgrade Your Project Management Skills

ABOUT THE PROGRAM

These days an important field that is on the rise is Project Management. Many methodologies have come up that include different ways and methods to manage business projects. These include some of the most known methodologies such as the Lean Six Sigma for it’s ‘muda’, TOGAF® for it’s ADM and PRINCE2® with its Projects in controlled environments. All these methodologies have been a great help to the project managers. With P3O® i.e. Portfolio, Programme and Project Offices methodology being introduced, the project managers have greater control over the management of programmes and projects. P3O® helps the project managers remove the differences that may exist between the planned and actual implementation of the business strategies. This results in bringing about better products and services that implement the P3O® methodology.

  • P3O is the most wanted project management framework

  • Deliver projects and programmes effectively using P3O

  • Know about the P3O value matrix

  • Get certified from P3O specialists

PREREQUISITES

The delegates are required to have passed the Practitioner Exam in order to appear for this certification. Delegates with a Foundation Certification cannot sit this exam.

TARGET AUDIENCE

The candidates who wish to play an active part in any of the offices as described in the P3O® model are the target audience for this course. The candidates fulfilling the management, generic or functional roles of the P3O guide as well as those who find themselves following the P3O model as a career path are also worth the consideration of this course.

WHAT WILL YOU LEARN?

  • Learn the Terminology and definitions of P3O®
  • Know how can P3O® help benefit the Organisation
  • Learn about Prioritization, Management and Dashboards
  • Go through various business cases of P3O®

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PROGRAM OVERVIEW

All P3O® Practitioners to keep their certification valid and continued have to go through the re-registration examination within a period of three to five years from the date of their original. When the candidates take the re-registration examination it enables them to show their assurance to Continuing Professional Development and that they will always possess the updated knowledge of P3O®. Candidates having passed the Foundation examination cannot sit for the re-registration exam.

Examination Details

  • Two questions, with a scenario background and appendices
  • Maximum Marks: 40
  • Pass Percentile Required: 50% or 20 Marks
  • Duration: 90 minutes or One hour 30 minutes
  • Open book (Only Portfolio, Programme and Project Offices: P3O® guide allowed).

PROGRAM CONTENT

Course Contents

This course covers the following topics:

  • P30® Re-Registration – An Introduction
  • P3O® - Features
  • P3O® - Terminology and definitions
  • Business Cases in P3O®
  • Model Editing in P3O®
  • Services & Functions of P3O®
  • Portfolios, Projects & Programmes – A Relationship
  • How can P3O® help Benefit the Organisation
  • Roles & Responsibilities in a P3O® Organisation
  • Correct Staff Recruitment
  • P3MS Summaries
  • Prioritization, Management and Dashboards
  • Implementing P3O®
  • P3O® Capabilities
  • How to Overcome The Barriers
  • Information Flows & Designs
  • Tools & Techniques
  • Summary

P3O® Re-Registration Enquiry

 

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

ABOUT Glasgow

Glasgow, with a population of 1,057,600, is the biggest city in Scotland. Not only this, it is also the fourth biggest city in the whole of UK after London, Birmingham and Manchester in terms of population. Glasgow is situated on the River Clyde in the West Central Lowlands of the country. Citizens of Glasgow are known as “Weegithe es”.

Places of Interest

Glasgow is home to various places that attract visitors every year.  Some of the famous attractions of Glasgow have been listed below:

  • Glasgow City Chambers: It is the most magnificent building that dictates the story of wealth and its industrial prosperity as the Second City of the Empire. It is a building that is an instant favourite among all who visit this beauty. The building was inaugurated by Queen Victoria in the late 1880’s and even today it is the headquarter of the city councils. There is a statue of the Queen with Truth above her. According to locals, the statue is their version of “The Statue of Liberty”.
  • Glasgow Cathedral: The Reformation that happened in 1560’s in Scotland was a troubled time for the country. Many buildings famed for their architecture, collapsed. However, it was the Glasgow Cathedral that stood the test of times. It is considered to be a superb building of the medieval era. The building is said to have been built somewhere between the 13th and the 15th Interestingly, the building was built at the place where the patron saint and founder of the city, St. Mungo was laid to rest. The place is his shrine.The Glasgow Cathedral is home to a crypt that was built in the 13th century. The crypt houses the body of St. Kentigern.
  • Glasgow Museums: The city is home to eight museums each of which have a rich collection of various artworks from the past as well as the present. The list follows:
    • St Mungo Museum of Religious Life and Art and Provand's Lordship
    • Gallery of Modern Art
    • Scotland Street School Museum
    • Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum
    • People's Palace and Winter Gardens
    • The Burrell Collection
    • Glasgow Museums Resources Centre
    • Riverside Museum

 The museums have abundant of rare artworks, collection of different type of furniture, arms and armaments, and what not. All the Glasgow Museums have free admission and their sections for the kids as well where they not only have fun, they also learn. The accompanying shopping centres in some of the museums also sell replicas of the artworks.

  • Glasgow Cross: The Glasgow Cross is medieval architecture building. It houses a Clock Tower that used to be a part of the City Chambers that was destroyed by fire in 1926. The building also houses another hexagonal shape building the Tolbooth.
  • Glasgow is also famous for its bridges. The Tradeston Pedestrian Bridge, Kingston Bridge, and the Clyde Arc are just some of them.The Tradeston crosses the River Clyde on the east of the M8 motorway while the Kingston Bridge crosses the River Clyde carrying the M8 motorway along with it.The Clyde Arc is a new bridge and also has a wonderful curved design as it crosses the bridge.
  • Parks: Besides museums and bridges forming the pride of Glasgow, the parks also help in promoting the city tourism. Some of the major parks that the visitors could come across in Glasgow are listed below:
    • Bellahouston Park
    • Botanic Gardens
    • Glasgow Green
    • Kelvingrove Park
    • Mugdock Park
    • Queen’s Park
    • Strathclyde Country Park
    • Victoria Park
      • Fossil Grove: Part of the Victoria Park, this is open in summers only.
    • Tollcross Park

 

 

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