What went well:
* I passed with 5 Ps!
* Watch all overviews, then take self assessment (give yourself a good baseline and confidence, you already know you don't know the content yet, otherwise you wouldn't be learning it)
* For each section, watch videos, read PMBOK Guide, read Exam Prep
* Once you begin to start doing practice exams, keep a log of your gaps as you review the exams. Study those gaps and review that list to make sure you now know those areas
* Full practice exams
What I'd do differently:
* I would not skip the Project Integration Management videos. I'd do that first then repeat it after finishing Project Stakeholder Management. I always felt as if I was missing some information that would be helpful to know.
* Apply for PMP sooner. Once I had my application approved, my options to take the exam were the next day, in 3 weeks or in 8 weeks. I was looking for about 5 weeks and took 3 weeks because I didn't want to wait 8 weeks, I did not complete all the practice exams as a result.
What didn't go well:
* Studying took 2x longer than I expected. I thought I'd be done in 4-5 weeks, instead it was 8-9 weeks
My last tip is find what works for you. The key is learning the processes. If you do these things in your work, it's easy to relate and learn it. If you don't do it, maybe try and do it. Never had a Project Charter? After you review that process, why not make one? It doesn't have to be as detailed as a real one, but just make on for a project you worked on recently/currently. Never done risk management? Go through the 6 processes and create the outputs and perform the tools and techniques. You are going to remember them a lot better. Find the best way for you to retain the knowledge for these processes. The vast majority of the exam is all on this. If you know and understand the processes, you're going to pass the exam.
Training for Project Management Professional (PMP)®, PMI Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP)®, and Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM)®