Attempted Robbery In Cape Town
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi Tony,
I'm an IT contractor (a techie) and have worked under various project managers in my time, of varying degrees of ability. The one thing that has struck me - none of them has followed remotely the same career path!
As WoWo rightly points out, a lot of people are IT techies go : programmer, team leader, project manager. However, for every one of those, there is say a general business person, who is good at getting things done. One of our PM's is an ex army captain, for example - he had very little IT background previously. We also get a lot of ex-accountants, who don't just want to do number crunching, so get involved from that perspective.
However, all of them can demonstrate a wealth of experience on their CV's, usually across a broad range of businesses. I would say the best have a 'can do' attitude, have a very thick skin, and at times are the best bullsh!tters known to man! I would say that the ability to 'spin many plates' is their biggest skill.
It is fairly lucrative if you can get into it though - �500 a day is about the going rate for a PM where I am - better than a kick in the nuts!
Not sure about the qualifications.
Obviously they wouldn't hold you back, but I'm not sure how much of an advantage they give you - perhaps they might get your CV a little higher up the list, but its the experience that counts - you can't just go on a course and become a good PM at the end of it - so much is down to interpersonal skills, which one accrues over a lifetime.
I should have added last night that a lot of people become PM's by being a good manager in a more defined role. Their talent is apparent in that role, so they will be recruited from within to manage a project; if they do well, they go on and do more projects, and all of sa sudden that's all they do - and where they are in the market for the jobs that you have seen advertised. Most will tell you, I think, that they 'fell into it' having trained in something else!
I know nothing about this organisation, but they may help you:http://www.apm.org.uk/
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