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PMP Practice Test


Page 14 out of 76 Pages

Topic 1: Exam Pool A

A company is initiating a project to enhance one of its existing products. All of its products are developed internally What should the project manager do?


A.

Ensure the stakeholder engagement plan is accurate and properly documented.


B.

Review the lessons learned from the previous project


C.

Identify the risk of implementing the new solution and evaluate the impact on the project.


D.

Create a lessons learned document for the initiation phase





B.
  

Review the lessons learned from the previous project



Lessons learned are the documented information that reflects both the positive and negative experiences of a project. They help project managers and teams to learn from their successes and failures, and to apply that knowledge to improve current and future projects. Reviewing the lessons learned from the previous project is a good practice for the project manager to do before initiating a new project, especially if the new project is similar or related to the previous one. By reviewing the lessons learned, the project manager can identify what worked well and what did not work well in the previous project, and use that information to plan, execute, monitor, and control the new project more effectively and efficiently. The project manager can also avoid repeating the same mistakes, leverage the best practices, and incorporate the feedback and recommendations from the previous project stakeholders. This is part of the Develop Project Charter process, which aims to define the new project and authorize the project manager. The other options are not the best choices because they are not the first thing that the project manager should do before initiating a new project. Ensuring the stakeholder engagement plan is accurate and properly documented (option A) is an important activity, but it is done later in the planning phase, after the project charter is approved and the key stakeholders are identified.

The stakeholder engagement plan is a component of the project management plan that describes how the project will communicate and interact with the stakeholders. Identifying the risk of implementing the new solution and evaluating the impact on the project (option C) is also an important activity, but it is done later in the planning phase, after the project scope, schedule, and cost are defined. The risk management plan is a component of the project management plan that describes how the project will identify, analyze, prioritize, respond, and monitor the project risks. Creating a lessons learned document for the initiation phase (option D) is a good practice, but it is done at the end of the initiation phase, not at the beginning. The lessons learned document is a project document that records the knowledge gained from the project activities and processes. It is updated throughout the project and finalized at the end of the project.

A project manager is in a learn meeting and the project team requires a decision to be made about a new suggested timeline due to an impact from a potential scope change What should the project manager do?


A.

Make the decision on behalf of the organization


B.

Review the stakeholder map along with the organizational chart and delegate the most senior person to make the decision


C.

Schedule a project decision meeting with all stakeholders to discuss the decision.


D.

Follow the stakeholder engagement plan





D.
  

Follow the stakeholder engagement plan



Following the stakeholder engagement plan is the best option for the project manager in this situation. The stakeholder engagement plan is a document that describes how the project manager will communicate with, manage the expectations of, and involve the stakeholders in the project decisions. By following this plan, the project manager can ensure that the decision about the new timeline is made in a transparent, collaborative, and timely manner, and that the stakeholders are informed and satisfied with the outcome.

References: (Professional in Business Analysis Reference Materials source and documents)

PMBOK Guide, Seventh Edition, Section 13.2.3, “Stakeholder Engagement Plan”

Professional in Business Analysis (PMI-PBA) Guide, Section 5.3.2, “Stakeholder Engagement”

During the daily meetings with the team the project manager notices that a new team member is not making the expected progress on an assigned task What should the project manager do?


A.

Ask the new team member to follow the team ground rules.


B.

Ask an experienced team member to identify a replacement


C.

Ask the new team member to reassess their own capabilities


D.

Ask an experienced team member to coach the new team member





D.
  

Ask an experienced team member to coach the new team member



The project manager should ask an experienced team member to coach the new team member, as this is a strategy for developing the skills and performance of the new team member. According to the PMI website, coaching is one of the interpersonal and team skills that a project manager should have. Coaching is a process of providing guidance, feedback, and support to help someone improve their abilities and achieve their goals. By asking an experienced team member to coach the new team member, the project manager can leverage the knowledge and expertise of the existing team, and foster a culture of learning and collaboration. The project manager can also monitor the progress and results of the coaching, and provide recognition and rewards to both the coach and the coachee.

The other options, asking the new team member to follow the team ground rules, asking an experienced team member to identify a replacement, or asking the new team member to reassess their own capabilities, are not the best ways to deal with a new team member who is not making the expected progress on an assigned task. Asking the new team member to follow the team ground rules may help the new team member to understand the expectations and norms of the team, but it does not address the specific issues or challenges that the new team member is facing. Asking an experienced team member to identify a replacement may be a drastic and demotivating measure, that may not be feasible or fair to the new team member. Asking the new team member to reassess their own capabilities may be a constructive feedback, but it does not provide any support or assistance to the new team member.

References: 1 Interpersonal and Team Skills - Project Management Institute 2 A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) – Sixth Edition, Chapter 9.4.2.4 3 Business Analysis for Practitioners: A Practice Guide, Chapter 5.3.3

A project manager accepts a delivery at the project site but the items are of a poor quality The project manager gets the local vendor to fix the items but more deliveries from this vendor are expected

What should the project manager do going forward?


A.

Allocate extra time to inspect deliveries for quality assurance upon arrival at the site


B.

Review the contract requirements and ask for the applicable evidence for quality assurance


C.

Have the vendor issue the quality documentation prior to the next delivery.


D.

Call the vendor and have them verbally guarantee the quality of the next site delivery





C.
  

Have the vendor issue the quality documentation prior to the next delivery.



According to the PMBOK Guide, 7th edition, one of the key activities in the monitoring and controlling phase of a project is to control quality by verifying that the project deliverables conform to the quality standards and requirements. This involves inspecting and testing the deliverables, reviewing the quality documentation, and requesting corrective actions if needed. The other options are either inefficient, ineffective, or not aligned with the quality management principles. References: PMBOK Guide, 7th edition, page 123-124, section 3.5.2.1.

A project manager is managing a complex research project with a high level of uncertainty A request is made to implement a mechanism to measure the quality of the deliverables.

Using a hybrid approach, what techniques can be used to achieve this goal?


A.

Daily Scrum and product owner quality assessments.


B.

Scrum master reviews and the quality Kanban method


C.

Paired work and the customer role method.


D.

Time-boxed iterations and standup review meetings





C.
  

Paired work and the customer role method.



Paired work is a technique that involves two team members working together on the same task, sharing ideas, feedback, and quality checks. This can improve the quality of the deliverables by reducing errors, increasing creativity, and enhancing collaboration. The customer role method is a technique that assigns a team member to act as the customer or end-user of the deliverable, providing input, validation, and acceptance criteria. This can improve the quality of the deliverables by ensuring they meet the customer’s needs, expectations, and satisfaction. Both techniques are examples of hybrid approaches that combine elements of agile and traditional project management methods, allowing the project manager to adapt to the high level of uncertainty and complexity of the research project.

References: https://www.float.com/resources/hybrid-project-management/

https://www.pmi.org/-/media/pmi/documents/public/pdf/publications/pmj/research-summaries/pmj-practitioner-insights


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