Is the IBM IT Project Manager Professional Certificate worth it?

Is the IBM IT Project Manager Professional Certificate worth it?

I’ve done a lot of project management training in my 20+ years as a project manager, and those courses helped me understand the skills, tools and techniques required to succeed leading projects.

But I’ve never taken one specifically aimed at IT professionals specifically (before this course), even though I worked in the IT department for many years.

(This article contains affiliate links which means I may make a small commission if you go on to make a purchase from one of my recommendations. I was not asked or paid to do the training, so these are my honest opinions.)

The IBM IT Project Manager Professional Certificate was the first course I've taken aimed at technical project managers and in this review, I’ll share:

  • Why the IBM Project Management certificate doesn’t require pre-requisites (and what you do need to pass)
  • Why it’s especially good for early career project managers, even those who don’t work in IT
  • How long you’ll need to spend going through the course materials before you pass, and what that process looks like.

This course is new (it launched in June 2023) and it could turn out to be one of the most popular project management certifications for beginners on the market.

I’ve spent quite a few hours reviewing the materials and going through the lessons so you can save time in your own course evaluation.

How I did this review

I joined the class as a pre-enrolled student so I had access to the courses that make up the certificate as soon as they became available. I completed the quizzes, did the peer assignments and worked through the training videos.

And I got the badge to prove it!

Credly badge IBM IT Project Manager


Who is the IBM IT Project Management Certificate for?

The Coursera IBM IT Project Management Certificate is aimed at complete beginners.

You don’t need any prior knowledge or pre-requisite study, or any particular education requirements in order to take the certificate.

Everything is very clearly explained, starting from the assumption that you know nothing. If you do know that particular topic, you can skip through the videos on fast speed or move directly to the quizzes.

However, the Introduction to Agile Development and Scrum course does recommend that you are comfortable using a computer and that you’ve had some involvement in software development or IT project management, perhaps as a team member or stakeholder in development projects.

You’ll certainly find it easier to work through the material if you have some experience in the field, although don’t worry if you aren’t technical at all!

Project managers don’t have to be domain experts: you aren’t going to end up coding as a result of taking this certificate. However, you will walk away with a solid (high-level) understanding of technical architectures, platforms and an overview of languages used in software development projects.

This course is great for:

  • People who have had no project management training and want to demonstrate they understand project management so they can break into an IT job.
  • People who are leading projects for their company but have had no formal training and would like to learn what they should be doing!
  • Project managers who are yet to take a professional certificate but don’t meet the requirements for the course they are looking at, for example, not meeting the eligibility criteria for the Project Management Professional (PMP)? exam.

After taking the course, I think it’s perfect for early-career project managers because:

  • It covers pretty much everything you need to know to be ready for an entry-level IT project management job.
  • It’s from IBM. That’s a brand that potential employers will recognize.
  • It’s cost-effective if you work through the course quickly. The cost racks up if you spend months on it, but dedicate yourself to getting on with it and it works out cheaply.
  • It’s fully online so you can study around your day job or university requirements.

There are also several places in the course where PMI’s Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM)? credential gets a mention, and I felt it was a pretty good stepping stone towards earning that.

If you are considering a career in technical, digital or IT project management, this is a low cost, low-barrier-to-entry course to check out what the job is really like.

What about people who don’t work in IT?

I spent most of the first 15 years of my career in IT departments, running technical and business change projects under the umbrella of the IT division.

And you know what? I’ve come to the conclusion that there is no such a thing as an IT project .

Most projects these days include technical elements. While you might have a technical team working with you, leading those aspects, it never hurts to understand their world.

If you don’t lead technical projects but work with people who do, or you just want to get a better understanding of what that job would be like if you transition into a digital PM or IT software project management job, then this certificate course will give you a good grounding.

About the course and structure

The certificate is made up of 9 courses. These are:

  1. Introduction to project management
  2. Project management foundations, initiation and planning
  3. Project lifecycle, information sharing and risk management
  4. Project management communication, stakeholders and leadership
  5. IT fundamentals for everyone
  6. Introduction to software engineering
  7. Introduction to Agile development and Scrum
  8. Scrum master essentials
  9. Project management capstone

You don’t have to take them in order, and you can work on them all at the same time. However, the content builds so it is worth pacing yourself in that order.

I found that the agile development and scrum master courses included similar content.

You do have to take them all (and pass them all) to be awarded the certificate.

Each course is made up of several modules that cover the various topics. They include readings, demos, glossaries and video training.

Set up of the course

The good news is that if you do the work in the certificate program, you’ll pass. You can retake the quizzes and peer assessments. Stick with the work, and you’ll pass.

However, there is a lot of work to do! While there is obviously more to learn about leadership, the leadership fundamentals module will take you 3 hours to work through alone.

I have used a few different learning management systems for online training courses and the Coursera platform that this certificate uses is really slick.

The video pops out when you scroll down the page. The notes capture tool is great – little touches like that make it easy to use and minimizes the effort you have to expend on training.

How long does the IBM IT Project Management Certificate take?

The recommendation is 10 hours of study per week for 3 months. In theory, that’s half as much study as you need to do for the Google Project Management Certificate , but the IBM content feels more in-depth and technical as it is specifically framed through the lens of IT project management.

I certainly didn’t spend that long on it.

I think you can do complete the course much faster if you dedicate time to it. For example, you might have more than 10 hours a week to spend on the content.

You might have project management experience that means you don’t need to spend as much time on the foundational content and can skip to the IT-specific content.

If you are completely new to project management, and IT project management specifically, you will want to spend more time going through the content so you truly understand it.

The specific amount of time you’ll have to spend on the certificate is going to depend on how much time you can dedicate to studying, and how quickly you pick up the concepts.

How the assessment works

Each module ends with a timed, graded quiz or final exam.

There are also practice quizzes so you can get used to how quizzes are structured before you attempted the graded quiz for each module.

Peer-graded assessments

Much of the certificate relies on graded quizzes, but some of the courses and the Capstone project include peer-graded assignments.

A peer-graded assignment is where you submit your work and other students review it. You also have to review other people’s work, and you get a marking scheme to make that easy. It’s a great way to encourage participation and it helps you put what you have learned into practice.

What you need to pass the course

You know what you really need to pass the course? Time.

Make sure you put aside the time to do the work, otherwise the IBM PM Certificate will be yet another thing you started on the internet and never got anywhere with.

Because you don’t have to attend a class, you can let your learning drift if you want to.

The course platform sends you reminders, and they pace your learning by creating dates for assignment submission so you can plan your study time. But it is up to you.

What certificate do you get?

You get a downloadable PDF certificate per course, and when you complete all the courses, a shareable LinkedIn badge via Credly.

I also got a ‘surprise’ Credly badge for completing the project management fundamentals course, the one called Foundations, Initiation and Planning.

Credly badge IBM PM Essentials


There is optional Honors content, for example in the Intro to Agile Development and Scrum course. That means your certificate for that course has ‘with Honors’ written on it, and it means you took the time to do the optional Honors project, which in this case is creating an Agile plan with ZenHub.

It is useful to do the Honors content if you are serious about learning practical skills to talk about in interview, but you don’t have to do them to pass.

What I liked about it

The advantages of the IBM IT Project Management certificate are:

  • It’s technically focused and from a brand that IT employers will value.
  • It takes you from knowing nothing to having a decent understanding of what it means to lead a technical project, covering a lot of content.
  • You don’t need any prior experience.
  • You work through examples, demos and case studies in the course, including in the Capstone, so you get to put your skills into practice (helpful for when they ask you at interview if you have ever done a particular thing).
  • The content is fantastic quality, with experienced trainers.
  • To earn the certificate, all you have to do is complete all the work.

That final point sounds easy, but trust me, there is a lot of content to get through for the certificate, so don’t underestimate the amount of work and learning involved, especially if you are coming to the topics completely new.

There is no final, pressured exam but there is the capstone to work through. If you are nervous about taking invigilated exams, that’s another reason to take this course over one that makes you sit a final exam!

What I didn’t like

The disadvantages that I found are as follows.

Until you are registered, it’s hard to find out how much the IBM IT Project Management certification course costs. It is not included in Coursera Plus which is the monthly subscription, although I thought it was at first.

You get 7 days free. After that it’s £39 per month, or the equivalent in your country.

The faster you work through the course, the less it costs.

Peer-graded assignments. What if you have to wait 7 to 10 days for another student to assess your submitted assignments? I was worried that as the course was new at the time I took it, there might not be that many people working through it at your pace.

I shouldn’t have worried, I got my grades within 48 hours of submission.

However, I failed one of the peer assignments, and looking back over what I submitted I disagreed with some of my marks. The marking system is very structured which doesn’t leave much wiggle room for you to interpret the assignments.

But on my RACI matrix, I definitely included all the roles and I got marked down for not including all of them.

I also did a completely rubbish job at one of the assignments and deserved to fail based on that document, but on the RACI matrix, I believe I deserved a few extra points!

Still, it’s easy enough to tweak and resubmit (I didn’t actually change the RACI, I just resubmitted the same file again in the hope that the next reviewer would mark it differently).

Still, my assignments were only marked by one person before I got the grade, so you are at the mercy of your peers.

Recommendation: Should you take this course?

If you are seriously considering a career in IT project management and want a certificate to put on your job applications from a training provider that people will recognize, then this is a fantastic entry-level certificate.

Use your free trial time wisely, cancel your social engagements and just blitz through the content.

I should let you know that I am impressed with the course and that I’m now an affiliate for the Coursera platform so I can recommend it, but I only recommend products I have tested out and am confident in.

Ready to check out the course?

Register for the IBM Professional IT Project Manager Certificate now and get started on your next career step.

I am already enrolled in the IBM project management course and I am so thankful for following your recommendation about this particular course .

Busayo Oyepitan

Administration Officer at His Majesty's Courts and Tribunals Service | First Class Law Graduate | Seeking Project Management Opportunities | Skilled in Organization, Coordination, and Strategic Planning

2 个月

Amazing read. Very useful information provided here. Thank you Elizabeth.

回复
Victor Ezeji, PMP

Project Manager | Project Analyst | Project Control analyst | Project Cost Controller | Data Analyst

7 个月

Hi Elizabeth Harrin FAPM thanks for your assesment of the course, does one have access to the materials after completion of the course.

Andrew Magill

Full-Stack Web Developer | Front-end Engineer | focused on Marketing, Healthcare, Ecommerce Experiences

9 个月

I would be interested to hear if there is an equivalent or comparable "Digital" PM course.

阿帝

多语言的动态董事会成员,拥有管理科学硕士学位,超过16年的企业管理、项目管理、物流和新业务发展经验。

11 个月

Hi Elizabeth, thank you for your insightful thoughts on the IBM Professional IT Project Manager certification. I'm currently enrolled in the program, bringing with me extensive experience in project management, business analysis, and enterprise management. Much of the course content aligns with what I learned during my master's degree in management science back in China. Despite this, I find the course remarkably refreshing, akin to stepping out for a breath of fresh mountain air.

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