Talk:Project Management Institute
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Discussion
An anonymous contributor wrote "Need to compare with real degrees such as MBA, also reads like a PMI Brocure [sic] and is not NPOV" I think the current information is factual, and doesn't express an positive or negative opinion. Stating that a professional certification is not equivalent to a college degree isn't worthy of an encyclopedia entry. Many employers require a PMP certification as a condition for employment or advancement, but do not require an MBA. --Garrybooker 04:31, 8 May 2006 (UTC)
Good discussion. The fact that PMI has "sold" the PMP to some employers means, what? Also consider comparing PMI/PMP to the backlash from the Agile/Scrum approach, that's not opinion, that's fact. While PMP'ers still have enthusiasm for PMI, in a sense, this is a "bill of goods" being "sold" to the public.
Dear Anonymous Person: The expression "a bill of goods" means something intentionally misrepresented, or something passed off in a deception or fraud (I looked it up). What do you think is intentionally misrepresented, deceptive or fraudulent? While I don't always agree with the PMI processes (I think many small projects require a different approach) I have never seen anything in PMI that is deceptive or fraudulent. It is a very ethics-oriented organization. --Garrybooker 16:23, 13 May 2006 (UTC)
It's several things. PMI is attempting to establish itself as the gatekeeper to jobs, where a job req is the PMP only issued by PMI. This is a concerted effort. Then they sell the PMP training, books, and charge for the exams. Then the cycle begins all over again. There are many, many alternatives to PMI's PMP, a BBA, an MBA, many colleges have 4 year programs as well as graduate programs that include substantive management course work. There are also other certificate programs, CDP/CCP/CDMP/ISA (granted it's different but the concept is the same). In contrast, the PMP exam is a fairly superficial quiz. While it's better than nothing, it's not substantive. As a hiring manager, I'd be tempted to take off points for a PMP.
"I'd be tempted to take off points for a PMP" Sounds like you had a bad experience w/ PMI...did you fail the test or get passed over for someone w/ the PMP. As for PMI/PMP cycle, it is no different than GMAT and B School and LSAT and Law School (The guys who handle the accreditation of law schools, ABA, also run the LSAT). A degree is dated shortly after you walk across the stage, a cert shows you have the desire and drive to keep learning...
A PMP is an affectation. Sorry, it's not substantive. You also have it backward. A cert like the PMP is about acquiring a few buzzwords; a degree is a reflection of effort to acquire wide ranging and enduring fundamentals. Neither is a substitute for experience. The fact that the PMP asks for experience does not make it a certification of experience or accomplishment. Unfortunately, everyone wants to set themselves up as the gatekeeper, ie, "buy my cert, pay for my classes, give me a portion of your income." Please do not compare the PMP to law school.
The other problem with the PMP is that the "body of knowledge", while OK, good maybe, isn't exactly how projects really work. There is too much emphasis on form, stakeholders, paper deliverables, meetings, and not enough on the hard issues. It's not substantive. What's really telling is that when you drag the internet for examples of PMP success stories, you find the converse.
Comment from Mel...
As someone who has managed projects (IT) for many years, I wish I had discovered PMI years ago. The PMBOK has a great deal of practical advise that took me years to discover by trial and error. Obviously it's not equivalent to an MBA, for example... but it's more relevant to my work experience than my BSc in math. I'm not sure it belongs in Wiki... but don't slam the PMP certification... Mel —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ve2dc (talk • contribs) 17:13, 10 September 2007 (UTC)
After reading the article, I was shocked to see the claim of 370,000 holders of the PMP certification and only a listed membership of 318K+! I help DPMA's CPM for years and found that it did had little or no impact on my career. I also think that it is extremely odd that PMI either sponsors, charges for, or benefits from a member maintaining their certification. At least DPMA would accept ALL training sources on a one to one credit basis. That is, they did not give more weight to DPMA training versus non-DPMA training as PMI seems to do. Overall, in my opinion, this is a certification for certifications sake only and in my world holds little or no relevence. I have worked side by side with PMP Certified Project Managers, and I use the term very loosely, who couldn't succesfully manage a project to save their own lives. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 12.43.88.121 (talk) 13:10, 30 March 2011 (UTC)
Program Management
Is there any more information about PMI's Program Management certification and its differences to the Project Management certification?
I've read all the information PMI has to offer and it seems like Program Management is focused on mid to senior level project managers. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Ykimva (talk • contribs) 15:11, 19 September 2007 (UTC)
Comments on the PMI Article
I believe the article on PMI is of a nature that does not belong in Wikipedia. It expresses more the opinion of an individual instead that it is factual. Such an opinion article may do well in the yellow press, but does not belong in Wikipedia.
- I think the article is more balanced right now with the last section. Pm master 15:30, 24 February 2008 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Pm master (talk • contribs)
I was first surprised to see the article but I agree, the artcle shows the potential issues and is not advertisement. The PMP certification is not comparable with a university diploma but clearly with a test like TOEFL. I am a PMP so I can compare. --Dr.Bernhardt (talk) 12:49, 2 April 2008 (UTC)
PMI Incorporation
Some chapters and SIGs are listed as registered Pennslvania non-profit corporations, but PMI itself doesn't seem to be listed. Clarification appreciated! To search the Pennsylvania Department of State business entity registration database, use this link . --65.78.213.196 (talk) 00:44, 15 April 2008 (UTC)
It looks like PMI itself is in that list; here is their listing: . The whole section on Not-for-Profit Controversy doesn't belong in this article because nonprofit status is a purely legal designation, not a moral one. Nonprofit organizations are entitled to charge fees for service -- they're just not allowed to make a profit. Megan Farrington, DPA (talk) 15:27, 30 April 2008 (UTC)
Being a purely legal designation and the factual demonstration that PMI is legally listed as a non-profit - this whole section should be removed. This post has been hijacked by someone unhappy with the organization and is just venting. Who will take the intitiative to do the re-write?Reb4179 (talk) 05:25, 23 July 2008 (UTC)
"Operational Goals" Section
Suggested page changes
Since there was a call for more sourcing and information, I wanted to go through this page and make suggested changes, including references. I started at the beginning, however, i believe the Not For Profit Status and Operational Goals sections have some factual mistakes as well. Here are my suggested changes for the current opening, Overview, Membership and Certification sections: The '''Project Management Institute (PMI)''' is a member association and advocacy organization for the project management profession. Overview & Membership <nowiki>PMI was founded by a group of five volunteers in 1969. Currently, the organization has 260,000 members in more than 171 countries. As of January 2008, 70 percent of the membership lived in North America.<ref>http://www.pmi.org/AboutUs/Pages/About-PMI.aspx</ref>
To serve its members and the profession, PMI has created industry standards, such as [[''A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge'']] (''PMBOK® Guide''), which has been recognized by the [[American National Standards Institute]] (ANSI)<ref>http://webstore.ansi.org/RecordDetail.aspx?sku=ANSI%2FPMI+99%2F001%2F2004</ref>. PMI also issues several professional certifications, produces industry and research publications, offers involvement in local chapters and holds four conferences, called “global congresses” around the world each year.
PMI also has representative offices in Washington, D.C., and Beijing, China<ref>http://www.pmi.org/AboutUs/Pages/Representative-Offices.aspx</ref>, as well as Regional Service Centres in Singapore, Brussels, Belgium and New Delhi, India.<ref>http://www.pmi.org/AboutUs/Pages/Regional-Service-Centre-Contacts.aspx</ref> Certification
PMI’s offers five professional certifications<ref>http://www.pmi.org/CareerDevelopment/Pages/Our-Credentials.aspx</ref>:
PMI Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP)SM
PMI Scheduling Professional (PMI-SP)SM
Program Management Professional (PgMP)SM
Project Management Professional (PMP)®
Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM)®
Nearly 260,000 people hold the PMP certification<ref>http://www.pmi.org/AboutUs/Pages/About-PMI.aspx</ref>. In 2007, it earned the ISO/IEC 17024 accreditation from the [[International Organization for Standardization]] (ISO)<ref>http://www.pmi.org/AboutUs/Pages/Release_PMI-055-08-07.aspx</ref>. Credential holders do not have to be members of PMI.
To maintain most PMI credentials, holders must earn Professional Development Units (PDUs) which can be earned a variety of ways such as taking classes, attending PMI global congresses, contributing to professional research or writing and publishing papers on the subject.<ref>http://www.pmi.org/CareerDevelopment/Pages/Continuing-Certification-Requirements-(CCR).aspx</ref>
Makingprogress19 (talk) 04:23, 8 July 2008 (UTC)
This is a very good suggestion for a re-write. It is NPOV and removes all of the inflammatory rhetoric that was existing. I would only suggest moving the discussion of its founding and membership to follow the listing of the certifications. It makes more sense to me to start out with a discussion of what PMI is and does before discussing its history and size. Reb4179 (talk) 05:29, 23 July 2008 (UTC)
Section Removal
i would like to suggest removing the section Not For Profit Status section. It's neutrality has been questioned and it has been marked as vague and is need of valid citations. If there is objection can we discuss ways to make improvements to it so that it is more neutral? Makingprogress19 (talk) 22:45, 24 July 2008 (UTC)
Congress section
Neutrality Question
I am wondering if someone can provide specifics about the questions of neutrality raised on this page. There is no discussion about it. Makingprogress19 (talk) 15:26, 2 October 2008 (UTC)
Page Sourcing
The majority of the sources on this page have been changed. They should now comply with third-party reliable sourcing. Can we remove the warnings on the page? How do you do that? Makingprogress19 (talk) 12:36, 6 October 2008 (UTC)
Neutrality Question (Part II)
Hello. My name is Len O'Neal and I work for PMI as the manager of online strategy and content. I'm a bit puzzled by the neutrality dispute on this page - does anyone know how it came about? Regarding neutrality - of the 21 cited references on this page, only three point to the PMI's Web site, the rest point to third-party sources. We'd be happy to supply alternative sources for the comments on the page regarding standards. And with regard to notability, PMI is a four-decade-old organization that has 265,000 members in 170 countries - well within the range of other organizations whose notability is not disputed on their Wikipedia entries (e.g., the Association for Computing Machinery with 83,000 members and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers with 365,000 members). Would appreciate any insight on why the neutrality dispute still exists on this page and if it could possibly be resolved. Thanks. ONeallen (talk) 19:50, 30 October 2008 (UTC)
- Comment from asoundmove:
- Quote from the top of the article: "PMI is the leading membership association for the project management profession.[1]". This is unsubstantiated (other than an incorrect self reference). Even the IEEE does not claim to be _the_ leader in their field, whereas they arguably are, instead they say "IEEE is one of the leading [...]". asoundmove 14 November 2008 —Preceding undated comment was added at 21:19, 14 November 2008 (UTC).
- I readded that claim. Made it even "world-leading", and based it on a reliable source. This simply explains people, who they are dealing with. As far as I know this is how Wikipedia works, and should work. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 15:49, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
Excellent point. Since I work for PMI, I’d rather not alter the content of this page. Would someone mind adjusting the wording of that first paragraph to read differently? Perhaps it could say something like 'With over 420,000 members and credential holders worldwide, PMI is the largest membership association for the project management profession.' I appreciate you pointing this out. Once this change has been made, does anyone see any reason why the neutrality flag cannot be removed? Are there any other issues with the content of this page? Thanks. ONeallen (talk) 24 November 2008 (UTC)
- I wikified this article and removed the tags, which I think shouldn't be here any more. I do think this article could use some more general introduction. I'll see what I can do sone. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 13:07, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- I wikified this article some more and readded an Advert-section tag in the article. I think this article needs work. My problem with that section is, that:
- It lists the MPI activities. Instead of describing it to a general audience from reliable sources.
- There is a rain of references. Instead there should only be wikilinks and links to reliable sources.
- It seem to shows a lot of news. Now Wikipedia is no news medium. Word like "currently" and "recently" should be avoided. Instead wite "in 2008" and add the reliable source.
- ... and wikilinks shouldn't be referenced.
- ... and all abreviations should be avoided.
- ... not reliable sources should be removed.
- I will make some more changes to the article sone based on these points. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 15:44, 2 December 2008 (UTC)
- I wikified this article some more and readded an Advert-section tag in the article. I think this article needs work. My problem with that section is, that:
Overview Section
The first paragraph has many misspellings or non-sequiturs. Surprisingly poor quality. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 205.225.207.33 (talk) 22:56, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
- Thanks. I made some corrections. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 23:22, 5 December 2008 (UTC)
Intro/article rewritten
I have rewritten the intro of this article, late last year. I am pretty sure this intro doesn't read like an advertisment any more. So I removed the tag (again).
Now if somebody thinks I am wrong, would he please explain, which particular sentences are not ok, so I can do something about it. Just a general tag with no justification makes little sense to me. Thank you. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 01:28, 26 May 2009 (UTC)
Advert tag
I removed the advert- tag for now. I do think think claims of presument advertisment should be explained of on the talkpage, so people can do something about this. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 23:36, 28 May 2009 (UTC)
- The intro is identical but for formatting. The entire article appears written by the organization itself. There are many blatantly biased advertising sentences, while I have difficulty finding a single sentence that would not be expected from an organization's advertising department. —Centrx→talk • 23:59, 29 May 2009 (UTC)
Maybe I haven't made myself quite clear. I have rewritten the intro between 2 and 7 dec 2008, see here, and recreated what I think is an introduction from a neutral point of view. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 00:01, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
- Okay. The intro is innocuous. The rest of the article reads exactly like advertising, and some of it is copied directly from PMI literature. The simplest edit to fix this would delete half the article. I was doing this edit, when I found that part was copied. It looks like all revision prior to 03:25, 12 January 2008 need to be deleted, and many parts since. It may be easier to delete the entire article and start from scratch, retaining parts not copied. —Centrx→talk • 00:10, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
- Thanks very much, I don't know about that last remark. First I will comment on the intro. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 00:18, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
Introduction
Thanks, I have no problem rewriting the article some more. Just for the record, I am definitly not on the payrole of the PMI instutute. I do have made a sever effort to improve the coverage of project management in Wikipedia lately (late last year, what cost me almost half a week). Now it seems to me the PMI has a similar position in the field of PM as the IEEE in the field of electrical enginmeers. So I will use the IEEE article as the standard:
- The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers or IEEE (read eye-triple-e) is an international non-profit, professional organization for the advancement of technology related to electricity. It has the most members of any technical professional organization in the world, with more than 365,000 members in around 150 countries.
If we translate this here, we could get something like:
- The Project Management Institute or PMI is is an international non-profit, professional organization for the advancement of project management. It has the most members of professional project management organization in the world, with more than 285,000 members in around 120 countries.
This should give, short of, a Wikipedia standard opening, which should do. Any objections? -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 00:18, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
- On the other hand the current introduction is based on two reliable sources:
- The Project Management Institute (PMI) is a non-profit professional organization dedicated to advancing the state-of-the-art of project management.<ref>Jon M. Wickwire et al. (2002). ''Construction Scheduling: Preparation, Liability, and Claims''. p. 289.</ref> It is the world's leading association for the project management profession.<ref name="NoKe07"> Sebastian Nokes, Sean Kelly (2007). ''The Definitive Guide to Project Management: The Fast Track to Getting''. p.331.</ref>
- It seems to me this is according to Wikipedia rules and can't classify as advertisement. So I propose to leave it with that. But if some one insist, we could make a combination of the IEEE intro and this intro. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 21:31, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
Accreditation by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
I just search though the (ANSI) website trying to get prove the PMI is accredited by the ANSI. So far I couldn't find a direct reference here. I did find in: Jan Van Bon (2006). Frameworks for IT Management. Van Haren Publishing. ISBN 9077212906. p.206:
- 1999 PMI accredited as a Standard Development Organization (SDO) by ANSI
- 2000 PMBoK Guide - 2000 Edition (Second edition) was published an is recognized as standard ANSI/PMI 99-001-2000
- 2004 PMBoK Guide - 2004 Edition (Third edition) was published an is recognized as standard ANSI/PMI 99-001-2004
I guess this will do as a acceptable source. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 01:32, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
Sections removed
30 May 2009 00:10 (UTC) the following sections have been removed by Centrx. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 21:54, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
- Certification
- Although there are other project management certification programs, the PMI certifications are widely acknowledged with the project management community.
- PMI offers the following professional certifications:
- Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM)
- PMI Risk Management Professional (PMI-RMP)
- PMI Scheduling Professional credential (PMI-SP)SM
- Program Management Professional (PgMP)
- Project Management Professional (PMP )
- Certified OPM3 Consultant (OPM3-CC )
- PMI Global Congresses
- Four PMI global congressess<ref>[http://congresses.pmi.org/ PMI global congressess]</ref> are held each year in the different regions of the world—North America, Latin America, Asia Pacific and Europe, Middle East and Africa (EMEA). These professional networking and educational events are open to everyone and include presentation topics in different Areas of Focus such as "Trends in Project Management," "Communication" and "Consulting Skills."
- PMI certification holders<ref>[http://www.pmi.org/CareerDevelopment/Pages/Our-Credentials.aspx PMI certification holders]</ref> can earn Professional Development Units (PDUs) for attending congress sessions and other pre- and post-congress events like the PMI Research Program Working Session and the PMI Standards Program Working Session.
- At the PMI Global Congress 2008—North America in Denver, Colorado, General Colin Powell will give the keynote address.<ref>http://www.pmforum.org/blogs/news/2008/06/general-colin-powell-to-keynote-pmi.html</ref>
- Researching the Value of Project Management
- In July 2008, PMI released preliminary results from its "Researching the Value of Project Management"<ref>''[http://www.pmi.org/Value/default.htm Researching the Value of Project Management]''</ref> study. Conducted with Athabasca University, the study was led by principal investigators Janice Thomas, Ph.D.,<ref>http://www.mba.athabascau.ca/titan/aucimwebsite.nsf/AllDoc/731902b120d74fc0872574830066dce3!OpenDocument&Click=</ref> and Mark Mullaly, PMP. The multi-million dollar study, which involves more than 60 case studies from organizations around the world and more than 440 interviews with project managers, suppliers and contractors, set out to prove that project management does equal organizational success.
- In "Solid Proof", a supplement on the study, Mark Mullaly said of the studies results: "We have clear, compelling evidence of value, and at the same time we have demonstration that value is being leveraged in different ways in different organizations both in terms of the tangible things they think they're looking for [and the intangible], but the intangible seems to deliver the greatest value to the greatest number of organizations."<ref>http://proggex.com/downloads/PMNSupp200808.pdf</ref>
- PMI Scheduling Professional Credential
- In 2008 PMI launched a new credential called the PMI Scheduling Professional credential (PMI-SP)SM for project team members who specialize in scheduling.<ref>http://www.scheduleassociates.com/scheduling-professional.asp</ref>
- To receive the credential, you must meet certain eligibility requirements set by PMI. For those with bachelor degree holders, that includes three to five years of project scheduling experience, a minimum of 3,500 hours of non-overlapping scheduling experience and 30 contact hours of formal education. For those with a high school diploma or associates degree, that includes three to five years of project scheduling experience, a minimum of 5,000 hours of non-overlapping scheduling experience and 40 contact hours of formal education.<ref>http://www.mosaicprojects.com.au/Training-Planning.html</ref>
- PMI Educational Foundation
- PMI Educational Foundation was founded in 1990 by the Project Management Institute (PMI®). It is a non-profit, non-political, public charitable organization. As a charitable organization, it is dependent on contributions to provide the income necessary to undertake its purposes.
- The PMI Educational Foundation has adopted the slogan "Empowering the future of project management" to demonstrate its commitment to advancing project management knowledge and the application of project management concepts and theory by society.
- The purpose of the PMI Educational Foundation is to promote economic, educational, cultural, and social advancement through the application, development, and promotion of project management concepts, theories, and life skills.
- The PMI Educational Foundation has a goal: to enrich lives through knowledge of and education in Project Management Life Skills.
- Further comments on the removal of these sections
These sections have been removed by Centrx with the argument:
- Delete advertising sections, some copied directly from PMI literature. Delete redundant list in Certifications section.
I personally agree with this removal for two more reasons:
- Two sections: "Researching the Value of Project Management" and "PMI Scheduling Professional Credential" seems to report recently new lanched and onging events. These new developments normally aren't considered notable enough to be mentioned in a Wikipedia articles.
- If they are mentioned they should be referenced by reliable third sources, which at the moment they don't seem to comply.
I do have my doubts about:
- The removal of the "PMI Global Congresses" already held four times, and "PMI Educational Foundation" founded in 1990.
- Other sections about prizes by the institute, and other regular things listed in wikipedia articles like these seem to be missing as well.
But I do think we owe it to the people. who contributed these sections to explain why, and give them the opportunity to question these removals. So I hope people will respond here. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 21:54, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
Further non-reliable sources + primary sources tag removed
To further clean this article from advertisements I have removed the following non-reliable sources:
- http://www.certmag.com/read.php?in=1851 : Free speech on line article in Certification Magazine by Denny Smith, Ph.D., is the manager of the certification program with PMI
- http://www.gantthead.com/blog/Project-Management-2.0/?userTagIDSort=20 : Seems a blog, which is generally not considered a reliable reference in Wikipedia.
- http://www.pmhut.com/10-quick-and-easy-ways-to-earn-pdus-for-re-certification : seems a blog on project management
- http://www.pmi.org/Resources/Pages/Standards-Development.aspx Direct link to PMI webpage on "Standards Overview"
With the removal of these references I also removed the primary sources tag, about "Primary sources or sources affiliated with the subject are generally not sufficient for a Wikipedia article". -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 22:11, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
Adverttag
I would like to propose to remove the adverttag. It seems to me the article has been almost completely rewritten since dec 2008, see here for the difference between then and now. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 22:22, 30 May 2009 (UTC)
- I see very little remaining that would classify the article as advertising. No objections to the removal of that tag. I would be very careful in restoring any of the above material unless secondary sources are clearly provided. Kuru talk 00:56, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- Ok thanks. I have removed the advert tag. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 22:12, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
Some more phrases
The article hasn't been rewritten a day, or an anom user has changed several phrases in the article.
- added the phrase "registered with the Internal Revenue Service as" in the opening sentence
- changed the phrase "It is the world's leading association" into just "a professional association"
- added "unpaid volunteers" voluntairs twice
Now I think:
- To my knowledge this is a highly irregular phrase in Wikipedia articles, so I already removed the first phrase
- I partly oppose the second change because, if you like it or not, the PMI is the largest institute world wide. The phrase itself was from a reliable source, and shouldn't have to be removed.
- And last. It seems adding "unpaid" and "volunteers" is double and should be removed.
This may require some more action. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 21:54, 31 May 2009 (UTC)
- It is "a professional association", is easy to source, but if the phrase "It is the world's leading association" that is an opinion, and unless there are multiple independent third party sources that claim it is true (eg a several independent trade journals, major news papers or whatever), then the source making the claim should be included in the text of the article (see WP:ASF).-- PBS (talk) 09:44, 6 October 2009 (UTC)
- I appreciate all the help I can get, but I am not sure what you mean. The current artice doesn't contain the phrase "It is the world's leading association" any more.. !? -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 09:51, 6 October 2009 (UTC)
- BTW you also say above "the PMI is the largest institute world wide." If there is a third party reliable source (not a Wikipedia article or an article by PMI or its affiliates) then that is a fact an probably should be included in the article. "It is the world's leading association" is an opinion, and as I said, see WP:ASF for guidance on this. --PBS (talk) 10:53, 6 October 2009 (UTC)
- Ok, thanks. You are right, I overlooked. I think I did reinstalle that particular phrase and somebody else removed it again. Eversince I left it that way.
- If I am not mistaken I took that "fact" from the Sebastian Nokes, Sean Kelly (2007). The Definitive Guide to Project Management: The Fast Track to Getting. p.331. which seems like a good reliable third party source. -- Marcel Douwe Dekker (talk) 10:59, 6 October 2009 (UTC)

