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5 Reasons to Become a Project Manager

Your first informal role as a project manager can often happen organically on the job, when your boss notices your technical and organizational skills and asks you to run a project. Maybe you鈥檝e been successful coordinating a one-off assignment to manage a product launch or a sales conference. Perhaps you merely have a hunch you鈥檇 be good at it given half a chance. Or it鈥檚 possible you have become your team鈥檚 de facto handler to guide complicated plans to completion 鈥 all great starting points for a project manager. But if you have not yet seriously evaluated the career benefits of formalizing your role through training and certification, this is a very good time to consider the top 5 reasons to become a project manager.

What Is a Project Manager?

Once common only in the fields of engineering and construction, in today鈥檚 digital marketplace for the daily and strategic operations of a range of organizations, from software developers to nonprofits to government agencies.

As a project manager, you鈥檒l wear multiple hats. You will initiate and define the scope of projects, organize teams, procure resources, mitigate risks, maintain deadlines, enforce (or occasionally change) priorities, and keep a million moving parts working toward the goal. Your overriding responsibility is organization 鈥 keeping every department, stakeholder, line of communication, and deadline on track. You鈥檙e the one who gets things done.

All in so far? Now let鈥檚 consider the most compelling reasons becoming a project manager could be the smart move for you.

Top 5 Reasons to Become a Project Manager

5. You鈥檒l Bring Value to Your Organization

The skills you learn in training for project management certification offer your company . Those skills focus on four primary tasks: defining the project鈥檚 goals, creating a plan, monitoring progress, and wrapping it up. There is also the 鈥渢riple constraint鈥 of balancing the time, budget, and scope of the project. Because you will have the tools to oversee the priorities, tasks, budgets, personalities, and deadlines involved in a project, you will be uniquely prepared to make things happen for your organization. You will enhance efficiency, elevate customer engagement, reduce costs, diminish risks, facilitate purposeful communication, and improve the bottom line.  

According to the Project Management Institute, . Those whose project managers report directly to executive-level leadership are almost twice as likely to bring projects in on schedule. Project managers 鈥渄elivered 30 percent of projects under budget,鈥 and their companies showed a 鈥21 percent improvement in productivity.鈥 On average, PMI reported in 2010, project managers saved companies $567,000 per project.

4.  You鈥檒l Never Stop Learning

Though there is a hallowed tome of project management called the PMBOK (Project Management Body of Knowledge) that outlines 49 processes typical to project management, as a certified project manager you will keep learning on the job every day because by nature, project management requires collaboration and agility. You will interact with and gain insights from the C-suite, stakeholders, customers, human resources, consultants, programmers, freelancers, and teams from every department in your organization. And what you learn will change with every project. No matter how many projects you manage over the years, you will always be faced with new collaborators, evolving technology, and never-ending business challenges.

3. You鈥檒l Be Well-Compensated

Across all industries, the median salary for a project manager is $112,000, according to PMI鈥檚 . Without Project Management Professional (PMP庐) certification, your salary could be as much as 23 percent lower, so it pays to pursue training, certification, and a professional project management position.

2. You鈥檒l Be in the Driver鈥檚 Seat

Project management is not necessarily on the executive track 鈥 although it is aligned to provide the skills and experience suited to a future chief operating officer 鈥 but you are the project executive, the CEO of the plans you put into motion and bring to fruition. Project management is the very proving ground for leadership. As the owner of projects, you gain a thorough understanding of your organization, its goals, its advantages, and its risks, as well as how to effectively manage them. Dictating to senior leaders is not your objective, but having their ear, their trust, and their support allows you to put your vision into motion. Accumulating a successful track record of managing projects is top-grade fuel for your career.

1. You鈥檒l Find Challenging Work in Any Field

Project managers are a force in almost every industry. Engineering, construction, and technology are top industries for project managers, as well as health care and the legal profession. According to PMI, as organizations have begun 鈥渄irecting more and more of their energy into projects rather than routine operations.鈥 Skilled practitioners with core competency in leadership, organizational savvy, and knowledge of their industry will continue to be a valuable resource to organizations around the globe, so your job prospects are outstanding. PMI projects 22 million new project-oriented jobs through 2027.

Becoming a highly recruited project manager demands more than training, background, and certification. plays a part, too. Do you score high in these character traits?

  • Flexibility
  • Confidence
  • Commitment
  • Proactive, can-do attitude
  • Common sense
  • Trustworthiness
  • Creativity

If you are ready to become a project manager, USF鈥檚 project management courses will give you the skills to prepare for your PMP certification and maintain your credentials with professional development units (PDUs). We offer the Project Management Certificate at both our Tampa campus and the St. Petersburg campus. It is offered on an open enrollment basis. No application is required. Our Project Management Professional (PMP庐) Certification prep course completes your educational requirement to sit for the PMP庐 exam in just five Saturdays. Your success is guaranteed. If you don鈥檛 pass the exam, you could be eligible to retake the class for free.

Ready to become a certified project manager?

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About Corporate Training and Professional Education

USF Corporate Training and Professional Education empowers people to craft their future without limits through engaging professional growth learning and certification programs. Its programs focus on an array of topics – human resources, project management, paralegal, process improvement, leadership skills, technology, and much more.