

There are no pre-requisites to certification other than passing the exam. If you want to learn about project management best practices quickly, choose PRINCE2. So, to answer your question, which one you should do depends upon your motives. That was because they found the PMBOK so overwhelming with detail and complexity they found it impossible to see the wood for the trees. Students often comment that after doing a PMP course they had no idea what they should do when they returned to work on their project. What I have found is that almost without exception, students find PRINCE2 far easier to understand than PMP (or rather the PMBOK). Based in Asia I get lots of students who have already got PMP and they want to broaden their knowledge by taking PRINCE2. I've been a trainer in PRINCE2 for many years. The fact that they both emerged many years ago from the UK government does not mean they share the same methodology.Īnyway, to get back to the question. ITIL is a framework for IT service management, PRINCE2 is a project management methodology. There's some misinformation in some of the answers in this thread. I realise that this question was asked several years back, but it's still relevant today. there are additional certifications other than PMP and Prince2 (CPM, MPM, MAPM, CompTIA Project+, etc.). where will you be applying this? If you want to be a PM for the British government. This said, its flexibility allows other methodologies such as Agile and Price2 to fit in while address the holistic needs of an organization (both business and technology).īottom line. It has become the mainstream approach to project management and the de facto standard in IT projects. It is more general in nature and originated to add formal governance and oversight to construction and government / military projects. The PMP is based on standards established by the PMI (Project Management Institute) and embodied within the PMBOK (Project Management Body of Knowledge). By the way, the L for library is apt as the current version (V3) is down to 5 books (ITIL V1 was over 30 books!). PRINCE2 / ITIL is primarily focused on IT operations and is highly prescriptive. You will find PRINCE2 used mostly in Europe and among government / Crown Corporations. The early foundations of ITIL were based on best practices within the British Government and later expanded to be applicable to non-government work. PRINCE2 is based on a methodology, specifically ITIL (Information Technology Infrastructure Library). Many companies create their own aligned with pmbok (or other standard like IPMA).

I can apply (parts of) it on any project, also a Prince2 - project. The PMBOK (hence PMP) is more comprehensive of the whole project management field. Just like Yegor, I'm happy to know them both, (but not Prince2 certified). Google around and you'll find some in depth comparisons between the two.Īs to preference, that is personal of course. One example would be procurement management, which is not included in Prince2. I would therefore dare to call them complementary. It focusses on just a limited set of techniques.
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It still needs to be tailored to your needs but it is more a manual than a reference guide.
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It gives a step by step guidance on how to organise and run a project. Prince2 on the other hand is a methodology, with a detailed process model and templates. It is therefore more theoretical, a reference guide. It contains a truck load of processes and 'generally accepted' techniques of project management by which to evaluate or complete the way you run your projects or the methodology you use. PMP is based upon the PMBOK, which is a Standard, NOT a methodology. PMP and Prince2 are two different things:
