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Reply: Has Anyone in Marketing Actually Benefited from Getting a PMP?

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Topic History of : Has Anyone in Marketing Actually Benefited from Getting a PMP?

Max. showing the last 6 posts - (Last post first)
1 week 5 days ago #33353

Joseph Flanders

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It all depends on where your base knowledge is. I have found I am able to relate to a lot of the conversations and lingo in the business much better than without the knowledge. It helps if you don't stop with just the PMP though and continue your education. Also, it doesn't help unless you choose to apply the methods.

As far as if it has helped raise pay; the PMP is documented to come with higher pay. However, as with most things that come with higher pay, (getting your Bachelor's for example), you will likely need to leave your current job and get a new job.
1 week 5 days ago #33352

Harry Elston

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Eidriana:

I can't speak directly from a marketing perspective (I'm a independent scientific consultant). For me, it has benefited my career quite a bit, but I cannot put a dollar amount to that benefit. Learning about formal project management through PMP study was eye opening with respect to how I should manage projects so that:
1. Clients don't take advantage of me through small, uncompensated scope changes.
2. I deliver exactly want the client wants. Sometimes this is a little tricky, as often they don't know what they want when they first approach me and we have to work through their needs and wants as we develop a scope for a project. With new clients, that process is compensated; with on-going clients, it usually isn't because I'm pretty sure that they won't jump ship to another consultant.

I often work with very large clients who have professional project managers on the project. Obtaining the PMP adds credibility to my consultanting and it allows me to speak in their language (project management language) so that we're both understood. Also, some clients, namely the US Federal Govermnent want certified PMPs running their projects as a prerequisite.

So, yes, it has benefited me and my company directly, but I cannot put a dollar amount to it.
1 week 6 days ago #33348

Eidriana Vallejo

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Hey all,

I've been working in marketing for quite a while and, like many people in the field, a large part of my job revolves around managing projects like campaign launches, website initiatives, agency relationships, cross-functional coordination, timelines, budgets, and stakeholder expectations.

Recently, I've been wondering whether formal project management training would add anything meaningful to my career. The PMP keeps coming up, but most of the professionals I know who hold it come from IT, engineering, construction, or operations backgrounds.

For those who started in marketing and later earned a PMP:

Was it worth the time and effort? Did it change how you approached your work or lead to new opportunities? Have employers or clients actually valued the certification? If you could do it over again, would you still pursue it?

I'm especially interested in hearing from people who were already established in their careers before earning the credential. Did it provide a real advantage, or was it more of a nice-to-have?

Thanks for sharing your experiences.

OSP INTERNATIONAL LLC
OSP INTERNATIONAL LLC
Training for Project Management Professional (PMP)®, PMI Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP)®, and Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM)®

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