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| PMP Exam Prep, Fifth Edition: Rita's Course in a Book for Passing the PMP Exam | 
enlarge | Author: Rita Mulcahy Publisher: RMC Publications, Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $89.00 Buy New: $55.98 You Save: $33.02 (37%)
New (22) Used (6) from $55.98
Avg. Customer Rating: 318 reviews Sales Rank: 897
Media: Paperback Edition: 5th Pages: 445 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8 Dimensions (in): 10.9 x 8.5 x 1.3
ISBN: 1932735003 Dewey Decimal Number: 370 EAN: 9781932735000 ASIN: 1932735003
Publication Date: August 8, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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| Customer Reviews:
Highly recommended... the only book you'll need March 25, 2007 11 out of 12 found this review helpful
This is the only book you'll need to prepare for the PMP exam. Literally, I only used this as a study guide (I didn't even open the PMBOK) and passed the exam on the first try. Look past the often condescending tone of the author and really absorb her tips and material. The quizzes at the end of each chapter are very representative of the types of questions you'll get on the exam. If you really nail the quizzes, you'll do fine on the exam.
An important tool for preparing PMP exam October 27, 2002 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
I didn't attend any formal training class and I have passed PMP exam recently with the help of this book (plus the use of 3 more other reference books including PMBOK).I have read both 3th edition and 4th edition (the latest one!). 3rd edition one is a very good exam preparation tool with lots of comprehensive training exercise and guideline for readers. But 4th edition provides much more. Many new exercises and questions are provided to accelerate your learning process. In addition, a new topic on "Professional Responsibility" (which doesn't appear in PMBOK) is added. I personally found PMP exam is very tricky and there are questions even experienced Project Managers may have difficulties to answer. It is very important to know more about the exam and to have adequate practice beforehand. This book is a very useful reference for anyone preparing PMP exam.
Rita's or Paul's book? January 30, 2008 10 out of 10 found this review helpful
I passed the PMP test today achieving my 11th certification, the most of them are IT related but PMP is a great knowledge asset for any professional, IT or not. Now that I have everything fresh in my mind, I want to share my experience with you: As a general rule for certifications, I always get two books, I fully study one, complete all the questions and then I take all the questions on the second book. In that way, I know the first book gave me all the necessary knowledge. For this journey I got "PMP In Depth: Project Management Professional Study Guide for PMP and CAPM Exams - In Depth" (Paul Sanghera) as my 'primary book' and "PMP Exam Prep, Fifth Edition: Rita's Course in a Book for Passing the PMP Exam" (Rita Mulcahy) as my 'questions book'.
If you don't know it yet, the whole PMP certification is organized around 9 knowledge areas (scope, time, cost, hr, procurement, risk, quality, integration and communication management. Each one has multiple related processes that are applied at different stages of the 5 phases of the project lifecycle (initiation, planning, execution, monitoring/controlling and closing). For example, you plan your costs during the planning phase and you control your costs during the monitoring and controlling phase of the project. Both cost processes belong to the cost management area of knowledge. So Rita's book is organized around this 9 knowledge areas while Paul's book is organize around the 5 phases of a project lifecycle.
I started with Paul's book four months ago (4hs every weekday, 11hs each weekend day). This book is fascinating! (please keep reading), because its organization follows the natural life of projects facilitating the learning process, it clearly shows inputs, processes and outputs for each project task, but it doesn't give you always a clear idea of where you are in reference to the knowledge areas. If the other hand, Rita's book is a complex reference to previous and subsequent page numbers, getting you to jump back and forth to understand how a project actually occurs.
I carefully studied Paul's book, I review every single detail on it, memorized every process (inputs, tools/techniques and outputs) and completed every question as well the 175 questions of his final test. I was confident of my knowledge, so I moved on to complete the questions in Rita's book. Misery! Rita destroyed every single hope I had of passing the test successfully! She made me feel that I have been wasting my time with Paul's book: I failed almost all her questions! It was probably the biggest book-related disappointment in my life, although Paul's book is easy to read, and well organized, it doesn't cover significant areas of the certification that are again and again presented in the test! While going thru Rita's questions I discovered that Paul has missed 2 absolutely essential areas required by the test. Let me tell you which ones: Cost management and communication management. The test has multiple questions related to these areas; if you don't know them you will certainly fail! I can't believe that Paul missed them, I consider that very irresponsible and not fair for students trusting his book.
With this fiasco, I went thru Rita's book and learned the remaining knowledge so my advice to you is: Study from Rita's book! Although it is organized around the 9 knowledge areas and they don't really follow the project lifecycle, but it is the way the test is organized and she covers all the topics of the test. To prove it to you (if you are skeptical and confused with so many light or emotional book reviews) I carefully took notes of the areas that Paul missed (I hope he reads this): Problem solving techniques (expectancy theory, motivation theory, McGregor's XY theory, Maslow's hierarchy of needs, Herzberg's theory and motivation agents), communication channels and formulas, PERT and PERT related calculations, cost estimation (can you imagine running a project without cost estimation?), project manager powers (formal, reward, penalty/coercive, expert and referent), outputs of contract administration, administrative close procedure applicability to each project phase. Besides this Paul's questions are extremely easy, the test questions are an extremely hard compared to them, therefore Paul's give you an inaccurate sense of test preparation level. I have also documented multiple important errata in his book and spent significant amounts of time verifying that they are actual errata. For instance: Paul's makes references to the cost baseline countless times in his book, but cost baseline is nowhere to be found (it is not even in the index), work performance is missed as an output of the directing and managing the project execution in the process chart, but is it cited two pages later; the administrative close procedure is an output of the close project process, he points out what the procedure should contain, but it never says when to execute it as he does it with the contract closure procedure.
It is just a very unreliable book for the test. So my advice to you, PMP student is, start with Rita's book and complete every single one of their questions, they look "too demanding, I can't believe the test is that hard" but the test is hard! Then if you have time and can buy Paul's book go directly to his questions and final test. But please, don't do it the other way around.
Customer reviews seem staged February 20, 2003 9 out of 15 found this review helpful
Customer reviews for this book seem staged. Notice how everyone recommends this book be read three times. They also have the same average score. I found this book to be average
Not suitable and not enough value for self-study September 21, 2003 9 out of 16 found this review helpful
This book cannot do it alone. Don't you get the impressions that all these rave reviews are fake plants from people who have taken her $1,100 prep course. All these reviews would have you believe that this book alone will get you ready for the exam. This book has enough errors and ommisions so that you'd be folled into thinking you are ready to take the exam when you are not ready to pass it.If you want this book, do youself a favor and take Rita's course where you get this book for free. I'd recommend a better value is that you buy Pete's PMP Cert For Dummies and Kim's PMP Study Guide instead.
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