Just ordered your book! This was already one of the most useful videos I've seen about applying for PM jobs. I'm looking forward to reading more about this topic. Thanks!
Thanks for clarifying the different PM experiences. I didn't know it could be achievable with limited experience. Highly informative and practical👍Thanks for sharing
The Chicken and egg.. I started my own project and delivered a mobile game and a few other deliverables. I hope this is enough when I interview in March! 🙏
Yes, I may be enough. Just ensure you use the project management terminology to explain how you planned it, gathered requirements, identified scope, and executed the project!
@@ITProjectManagers I'm currently taking the coursera Google PM course and plan to take agile/scrum certification course before March. Thank you for all that you do ❤️
Good selection of courses. You are on the right track. Keep in mind that getting a job in a new position is the game of numbers. You'll need multiple interview to get the PM job. So, don't be discouraged by the possible rejections.
I absolutely love this video and love the lego reference! haha! However when I hear your voice and accent all I think of is Hotel Transylvania when the dad says I dont go blah blah blah lol
Thank you for your videos and expertise advise. What would you recommend for someone in my situation with over 5 years of leadership and project management (PMP certified), but no technical IT background? My goal is to be an IT Manager so in the meantime I'm seeking a degree in IT Management.
I recommend you watch this video: th-cam.com/video/mvc8c4HXWrU/w-d-xo.html It explains how to get the required technical skills. So, overall, I recommend that you spend some time to learn basics concepts like SDLC and explore technologies a bit. After that, go ahead and start applying for IT PM jobs.
Since June 2023 I'm in position of the Senior Project Engineer in Automatics Industry. I've run hundreds of projects (control cabinets and control panels) for various industries. It's not exactly purely a Project Manager role, because I dealt with lots of technical issues as well as cooperation with Design Department, Production Department and Logistics is critical at my job. Can I in this case name myself as an Senior Project Manager?
Good question, Tomasz. First of all, ask yourself this. Do you feel like you know project management on a senior level? If yes, nothing should stop you from put a PM title in your resume. You can always say that you acted as a Project Manager in your Project Engineer role. But you must describe your Project Engineer's experience from project management perspective. By the way, there's no negative consequences for you if you test it out. So, I say go for it.
It's your resume. You can add what feels right for you. You must include everything that will highlight you talents and skills. Freelance projects are applicable experience. Leading a team is also a valuable experience for a PM. So, yes. Put it all in your resume and as much as you can, use project management terminology to describe these experiences.
@ITProjectManagers I have seen very few people here on TH-cam that replies to your questions. I think this is the best value which you provide by answering your audience. I really appreciate it
I'm totally biased here because I have my own project management course. The reason I created the course is this: All PM certifications, like PMP or Google PM, are an attempt to reverse engineer what project managers do in the real word. But... - PMI PMP decided they want to create a universal and generic PM approach. - Google is a bit biased as well. That's because they see project management through the lens of how Google works. ...and there's only one Google. The rest of the world works differently. - I decided to reverse engineer what I experienced in the real world in different organizations. And I focused on the practicality of my PM approach. So, with all this in mind, is Google PM Certification a good course? Yes, it is. Will it help you manage real projects in the messy world outside of Google? I'm not fully convinced.
Sorry to hear that. But the idea would be the same in the long run. If you are worried about technical skills, you're approaching it from a wrong angle.
I have 2,5 years of experience in IT support for a huge company, I'm 26 years old soon, without degree, and I want a better job since this one is bearly above minimum wage and it became pretty repetitive and feels like dead end job if I stay for longer. However do you think it gives me give me any advantage in becoming junior project manager or I kinda wasted 1,5 year in rock bottom IT job? I feel kinda guilty that I didn't think of transferring sooner like, right after I gathered my first year of experience in any IT job...
It depends on what you did during those 2.5 years. If you spend all your time fulfilling your main responsibilities answering customer requests, then you have nothing to put on your resume. But if you have example of leadership without authority, some micro projects, and improvements, then of course you can treat it as a related experience.
I would say, it's indirect experience. But you may claim you know how to organize work, communicate, lead people, and maybe manage vendors. At the same time, you probably did some small projects in addition to the ongoing responsibilities. So, you need to describe all of that in project management terms. If you can, you can claim to have some direct project management experience.
If you are talking about the book, yes, you'll benefit from it as well. IT written from the perspective on the general project management. You can apply the knowledge to any industry.
📚 Practical Project Management Book👇👇👇
Get The Book: itpmschool.com/go/book/
Do you sell on any other platform, except Amazon?
@@toniatsopovits the paperback version is available only at Amazon. You can buy the e-book version directly from my site.
Hi, what is the main difference between the book and the course ?
I am from Nigeria and I have the book. It's easy to follow and engaging!
Alot of work went into it.
Thanks
Thanks for your kind feedback. Glad you find it useful.
Just ordered your book! This was already one of the most useful videos I've seen about applying for PM jobs. I'm looking forward to reading more about this topic. Thanks!
Awesome! Thank you!
your videos are best,very clear representation of topics with use cases............ ...from india thank you..
So nice of you! Glad it was helpful
Thanks for clarifying the different PM experiences. I didn't know it could be achievable with limited experience. Highly informative and practical👍Thanks for sharing
Glad it was helpful, Jasmine!
Great content that is proven to get into this work. Thank you, Dmytro!
Thank you! You feedback means a lot to me!
Your videos are really helpful…thanks for your support
Glad you like them!
You're my HERO. thank you
You are welcome. I wish you good luck in becoming a great IT Project Manager!
The Chicken and egg.. I started my own project and delivered a mobile game and a few other deliverables. I hope this is enough when I interview in March! 🙏
Yes, I may be enough. Just ensure you use the project management terminology to explain how you planned it, gathered requirements, identified scope, and executed the project!
@@ITProjectManagers I'm currently taking the coursera Google PM course and plan to take agile/scrum certification course before March. Thank you for all that you do ❤️
Good selection of courses. You are on the right track.
Keep in mind that getting a job in a new position is the game of numbers. You'll need multiple interview to get the PM job.
So, don't be discouraged by the possible rejections.
under valuated information here. good video
Glad it was helpful!
I absolutely love this video and love the lego reference! haha! However when I hear your voice and accent all I think of is Hotel Transylvania when the dad says I dont go blah blah blah lol
Thanks for watching! I'm glad you enjoyed the Lego reference.
Thank you for your videos and expertise advise.
What would you recommend for someone in my situation with over 5 years of leadership and project management (PMP certified), but no technical IT background? My goal is to be an IT Manager so in the meantime I'm seeking a degree in IT Management.
I recommend you watch this video: th-cam.com/video/mvc8c4HXWrU/w-d-xo.html
It explains how to get the required technical skills.
So, overall, I recommend that you spend some time to learn basics concepts like SDLC and explore technologies a bit. After that, go ahead and start applying for IT PM jobs.
Since June 2023 I'm in position of the Senior Project Engineer in Automatics Industry. I've run hundreds of projects (control cabinets and control panels) for various industries. It's not exactly purely a Project Manager role, because I dealt with lots of technical issues as well as cooperation with Design Department, Production Department and Logistics is critical at my job. Can I in this case name myself as an Senior Project Manager?
Good question, Tomasz.
First of all, ask yourself this.
Do you feel like you know project management on a senior level?
If yes, nothing should stop you from put a PM title in your resume.
You can always say that you acted as a Project Manager in your Project Engineer role.
But you must describe your Project Engineer's experience from project management perspective.
By the way, there's no negative consequences for you if you test it out. So, I say go for it.
I have done lot of freelancing projects can I included them in a micro project. I did few in teams where I was a leader and few I did myself
It's your resume. You can add what feels right for you. You must include everything that will highlight you talents and skills.
Freelance projects are applicable experience. Leading a team is also a valuable experience for a PM. So, yes. Put it all in your resume and as much as you can, use project management terminology to describe these experiences.
@ITProjectManagers I have seen very few people here on TH-cam that replies to your questions. I think this is the best value which you provide by answering your audience. I really appreciate it
@@sohaibamjad2878 You welcome! I'm here to help:)
Dmytro, what do you think about Google PM Certification;
I'm totally biased here because I have my own project management course.
The reason I created the course is this:
All PM certifications, like PMP or Google PM, are an attempt to reverse engineer what project managers do in the real word. But...
- PMI PMP decided they want to create a universal and generic PM approach.
- Google is a bit biased as well. That's because they see project management through the lens of how Google works.
...and there's only one Google. The rest of the world works differently.
- I decided to reverse engineer what I experienced in the real world in different organizations. And I focused on the practicality of my PM approach.
So, with all this in mind, is Google PM Certification a good course?
Yes, it is.
Will it help you manage real projects in the messy world outside of Google?
I'm not fully convinced.
This video should be named How to get a position as a Project Manager without experience. Not what i was looking for as per the title.
Sorry to hear that. But the idea would be the same in the long run.
If you are worried about technical skills, you're approaching it from a wrong angle.
I have 2,5 years of experience in IT support for a huge company, I'm 26 years old soon, without degree, and I want a better job since this one is bearly above minimum wage and it became pretty repetitive and feels like dead end job if I stay for longer. However do you think it gives me give me any advantage in becoming junior project manager or I kinda wasted 1,5 year in rock bottom IT job? I feel kinda guilty that I didn't think of transferring sooner like, right after I gathered my first year of experience in any IT job...
It depends on what you did during those 2.5 years. If you spend all your time fulfilling your main responsibilities answering customer requests, then you have nothing to put on your resume. But if you have example of leadership without authority, some micro projects, and improvements, then of course you can treat it as a related experience.
I have a question: is administrative assistant an indirect experience or direct experience for project management?
I would say, it's indirect experience. But you may claim you know how to organize work, communicate, lead people, and maybe manage vendors.
At the same time, you probably did some small projects in addition to the ongoing responsibilities. So, you need to describe all of that in project management terms.
If you can, you can claim to have some direct project management experience.
Bought your book. Tried to subscribe to the pm basics but no email to my inbox.
Thanks for purchasing the book! Could you please clarify what you subscribed for? I'll try to fix it for you.
Is it only for IT PM, can it benefit me if am running other projects but not IT projects? Cause I barely know a thing in IT
If you are talking about the book, yes, you'll benefit from it as well. IT written from the perspective on the general project management. You can apply the knowledge to any industry.