PMP Preparation (PrePMP) by Dr.Behrangi(PMP-PMI)®
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A project manager on a global transformation project uses an AI decision-support tool to recommend eliminating a regional testing cycle because historical defect rates were low. The regional compliance lead argues that recent regulatory changes make the historical data less reliable. The sponsor wants to maintain the original timeline. What should the project manager do next?
A. Accept the AI recommendation because it is based on trend analysis
B. Retain the testing cycle until the recommendation is reviewed against current compliance conditions
C. Escalate the matter immediately to the legal department and suspend the project
D. Shorten the testing cycle and monitor regulatory feedback after release
Answer: B
The best PMP answer protects governance, compliance, and value before schedule pressure. Historical data does not override a changed business environment
🌹 Earning the PMP certification can enhance your career prospects by demonstrating recognized project management expertise, leadership capability, and commitment to professional excellence. It can help strengthen your credibility with employers and position you for broader job opportunities across industries.🌹
❤️Good news: the PMP can help open doors to more job opportunities and strengthen your professional credibility. It shows employers that you have recognized project management knowledge and experience.❤️
What does PMI consider the first step in a situational question?
PMI generally treats the first step as assessing and analyzing the situation before acting.
In practice, that usually means you first:
understand what is happening,
identify root cause, impact, and context,
then engage the relevant stakeholders or team members,
and only after that choose the response.
A concise exam rule is:
First understand the situation; don't jump straight to escalation or corrective action.
The main exception is when the scenario clearly involves an immediate safety, legal, compliance, or urgent risk issue. In those cases, faster action can be appropriate.
According to reports published on June 18, 2026, Donald Trump and Masoud Pezeshkian have electronically signed a 14-point memorandum of understanding aimed at halting hostilities and providing a framework for more comprehensive negotiations. This agreement, referred to as the "Islamabad Memorandum," is not yet a final or binding treaty, and many fundamental issues have been deferred to subsequent negotiations.
Key published pillars include:
1. Cessation of military operations and extension of the ceasefire for 60 days.
2. Launch of comprehensive negotiations in Switzerland to resolve remaining issues.
3. Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz for commercial shipping.
4. Gradual movement toward sanctions relief and the release of a portion of Iran's frozen assets.
5. Iran's reaffirmation of not pursuing nuclear weapons and continued cooperation with the IAEA.
6. Establishment of a joint mechanism to monitor implementation of the memorandum.
7. Consideration of reconstruction plans and economic cooperation in later stages.
Potential Implications:
· Iran's Economy: Likely reduction in political risk, improved economic expectations, and positive effects on currency and stock markets.
· Iran-U.S. Relations: The beginning of a new era of dialogue after decades of tension.
· Oil Market: Reduced concerns about the Strait of Hormuz and downward pressure on energy prices.
· Challenges: Issues related to the nuclear program, enrichment levels, primary U.S. sanctions, and other disputes remain unresolved and are contingent on future negotiations.
Therefore, the signing of this document can be seen as a significant diplomatic step, but its ultimate success will depend on the fulfillment of commitments and the outcomes of the 60-day negotiation period ahead.
Headline:
Diplomatic Breakthrough or Temporary Pause? Analyzing the Islamabad Memorandum (June 18, 2026)
✍F.Behrangi ( PMP)
18 June 2026
Summary:
On June 18, 2026, Donald Trump and Dr :Masoud Pezeshkian electronically signed a 14-point memorandum of understanding—dubbed the "Islamabad Memorandum"—aimed at de-escalating tensions and establishing a framework for broader negotiations. While not a final binding treaty, it marks a significant diplomatic opening after years of stalemate.
Core provisions include:
· 60-day ceasefire extension
· Comprehensive follow-up talks in Switzerland
· Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic
· Gradual sanctions relief and partial release of Iranian frozen assets
· Iran's reaffirmed commitment to non-nuclear weapons development and IAEA cooperation
· A joint monitoring mechanism for implementation
· Future exploration of reconstruction and economic cooperation
Key implications for stakeholders:
· Iran's economy: Reduced political risk, improved market sentiment, potential currency and stock market recovery
· U.S.-Iran relations: Possible new dialogue channel after decades of confrontation
· Global energy markets: Lower supply disruption fears, potential downward pressure on oil prices
· Unresolved challenges: Nuclear enrichment levels, primary U.S. sanctions, and other core disputes remain open—deferred to the 60-day negotiation window
Project Management Takeaway:
This is a high-stakes, time-bound diplomatic initiative with clear milestones, joint oversight, and dependent deliverables. Success hinges on execution, trust-building, and contingency planning for unresolved items.
According to reports published on June 18, 2026, Donald Trump and Masoud Pezeshkian have electronically signed a 14-point memorandum of understanding aimed at halting hostilities and providing a framework for more comprehensive negotiations. This agreement, referred to as the "Islamabad Memorandum," is not yet a final or binding treaty, and many fundamental issues have been deferred to subsequent negotiations.
Key published pillars include:
1. Cessation of military operations and extension of the ceasefire for 60 days.
2. Launch of comprehensive negotiations in Switzerland to resolve remaining issues.
3. Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz for commercial shipping.
4. Gradual movement toward sanctions relief and the release of a portion of Iran's frozen assets.
5. Iran's reaffirmation of not pursuing nuclear weapons and continued cooperation with the IAEA.
6. Establishment of a joint mechanism to monitor implementation of the memorandum.
7. Consideration of reconstruction plans and economic cooperation in later stages.
Potential Implications:
· Iran's Economy: Likely reduction in political risk, improved economic expectations, and positive effects on currency and stock markets.
· Iran-U.S. Relations: The beginning of a new era of dialogue after decades of tension.
· Oil Market: Reduced concerns about the Strait of Hormuz and downward pressure on energy prices.
· Challenges: Issues related to the nuclear program, enrichment levels, primary U.S. sanctions, and other disputes remain unresolved and are contingent on future negotiations.
Therefore, the signing of this document can be seen as a significant diplomatic step, but its ultimate success will depend on the fulfillment of commitments and the outcomes of the 60-day negotiation period ahead.
Headline:
Diplomatic Breakthrough or Temporary Pause? Analyzing the Islamabad Memorandum (June 18, 2026)
✍F.Behrangi ( PMP)
18 June 2926
Summary:
On June 18, 2026, Donald Trump and Dr :Masoud Pezeshkian electronically signed a 14-point memorandum of understanding—dubbed the "Islamabad Memorandum"—aimed at de-escalating tensions and establishing a framework for broader negotiations. While not a final binding treaty, it marks a significant diplomatic opening after years of stalemate.
Core provisions include:
· 60-day ceasefire extension
· Comprehensive follow-up talks in Switzerland
· Reopening of the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic
· Gradual sanctions relief and partial release of Iranian frozen assets
· Iran's reaffirmed commitment to non-nuclear weapons development and IAEA cooperation
· A joint monitoring mechanism for implementation
· Future exploration of reconstruction and economic cooperation
Key implications for stakeholders:
· Iran's economy: Reduced political risk, improved market sentiment, potential currency and stock market recovery
· U.S.-Iran relations: Possible new dialogue channel after decades of confrontation
· Global energy markets: Lower supply disruption fears, potential downward pressure on oil prices
· Unresolved challenges: Nuclear enrichment levels, primary U.S. sanctions, and other core disputes remain open—deferred to the 60-day negotiation window
Project Management Takeaway:
This is a high-stakes, time-bound diplomatic initiative with clear milestones, joint oversight, and dependent deliverables. Success hinges on execution, trust-building, and contingency planning for unresolved items.
Do you have to finish the prep course before the exam?
Yes. You must complete the PMI-CPMAI Exam Prep Course before you can schedule and take the exam.
Source:
https://www.pmi.org/-/media /pmi/documents/public/pdf /certifications/pmicpmai-exam -content-outline2025-updated.pdf
The eligibility requirements are minimal:
You do not need prior project management experience, AI experience, technical experience, or another certification to pursue PMI-CPMAI™. The main requirement is that you complete the PMI-CPMAI Exam Prep Course before scheduling and taking the certification exam.
PMI also notes that familiarity with project or product management and AI fundamentals is helpful, but not required.
Official sources:
https://www.pmi.org/certifications/ai-project-management-cpmai
https://www.pmi.org/-/media/pmi/documents/public/pdf/certifications/pmicpmai-exam-content-outline2025-updated.pdf
Certification
PMI Certified Professional in Managing AI (PMI-CPMAI)™ Exam Prep Course & Certification
No experience required
Your license to lead the future of AI. With PMI-CPMAI™, you’ll gain the tools to build with AI effectively, giving you the playbook to secure AI success.
The latest official PMI news is that a refreshed PMP exam launches July 9, 2026.
PMI says the updated exam keeps the same overall format of 180 questions in 240 minutes, but shifts more emphasis toward business environment, outcomes, stakeholder engagement, AI, and sustainability while still covering predictive, agile, and hybrid approaches.
The most notable change is the domain weighting:
- People: 42% to 33%
- Process: 50% to 41%
- Business Environment: 8% to 26%
PMI also notes globally aligned eligibility pathways and an extended eligibility period of 10 years.
Official sources:
- https://www.pmi.org/certifications/project-management-pmp/new-exam
- https://www.pmi.org/blog/pmp-exam-change
- https://www.pmi.org/whats-next
"Enduring Peace" (True Peace)
By Behrangi June 14, 2026
"Enduring Peace" (True Peace) is born from the union of external peace with social justice, economic security, civil liberties, and mutual trust within the heart of society.
We often understand peace in its narrow sense: the absence of war, the silence of cannons, the signing of a treaty between states. But this definition, however necessary, is not sufficient.
True peace is a multi-layered phenomenon that stretches beyond the battlefield and penetrates the deepest layers of working people's daily existence. Allow me to highlight a few of its dimensions:
1. Economical Peace:
When a citizen struggles every day with the anxiety of securing bread for the night, when their children's future is shrouded in uncertainty, one cannot say they live in peace — even if no sound of gunfire reaches their ears. Economic and livelihood security is the very foundation of any enduring peace. Without it, the surface calm of society is merely a veil over a hidden upheaval.
2. Peace in Speech and Thought:
A society whose citizens fear expressing their own ideas is waging a hidden war against itself. The fear of thinking and speaking is a form of soft yet erosive violence that consumes the collective spirit. True peace demands that the public space be a place of dialogue, not a field of threats.
Recognition of diversity: No society is made of a single color, a single voice, or a single perspective. A state and a society that regards the plurality of views as a threat is in truth at war with a part of its own being. Accepting difference is not weakness it is a sign of a nation's political and social maturity.
Security as trust, not fear: True security does not arise from repression; it springs from mutual trust between the state and the people. When security is equated with fear, what is achieved is the silence of a graveyard not the peace of the living.
3. Peace in External Relations:
Finally, internal and external peace are two sides of the same coin. A country that relies on tension, enemy-making, and confrontation in its relations with the world burns in the fire of external strife the resources and energy that could have been devoted to internal development. De-escalation and peaceful coexistence are not signs of weakness but the preconditions of any sustainable development program.
True peace, in the end, is a psychosocial condition before it is a military one. A society lives in peace when human beings can live without fear of tomorrow, think without fear of expression, and coexist without fear of being "the other."
