Use this syllabus as your GPM-b™ coverage checklist. Work domain-by-domain and practice immediately after each task set.
What’s covered
Sustainable Methods (50%)
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Task 1 — Explain sustainable project management fundamentals
- Define sustainability in a project context (economic, environmental, and social).
- Explain triple-bottom-line thinking and how it changes project decisions.
- Describe the P5 model (People, Planet, Prosperity, Product, Process) at a high level.
- Identify common sustainability drivers (regulation, risk, cost, reputation, customer demand).
- Use lifecycle thinking to recognize upstream and downstream impacts of project choices.
- Apply materiality thinking to prioritize which impacts and stakeholders matter most.
- Identify positive and negative impacts across People, Planet, and Prosperity dimensions.
- Assess Product and Process impacts, including resource use, waste, and operational effects.
- Document assumptions, boundaries, and data limitations used in impact assessment.
- Propose mitigation, avoidance, or enhancement actions for material impacts.
- Translate impact findings into sustainability requirements and constraints.
- Communicate impact trade-offs to stakeholders in clear, decision-ready language.
Task 3 — Define sustainability objectives and measures
- Write sustainability objectives that are specific, measurable, and time-bound.
- Select leading and lagging indicators that fit the project context and data reality.
- Define acceptance criteria that include sustainability performance (not just scope).
- Set target thresholds and tolerances for sustainability KPIs and compliance requirements.
- Plan how sustainability data will be collected, verified, and reported.
- Align project sustainability objectives with organizational policy and stakeholder expectations.
Task 4 — Build a sustainability management plan
- Define sustainability roles, responsibilities, and decision rights for the project team.
- Integrate sustainability requirements into scope, quality, procurement, and risk plans.
- Establish governance routines for sustainability reviews, approvals, and escalations.
- Plan training and communication so the team applies sustainability practices consistently.
- Design change control criteria that protect sustainability commitments when scope changes.
- Create an implementation roadmap that links actions to metrics, owners, and timing.
Task 5 — Manage sustainability risk, compliance, and ethics
- Identify sustainability risks and opportunities and record them in a risk register.
- Evaluate regulatory and contractual sustainability obligations and their project impacts.
- Apply supplier due diligence principles to reduce environmental and social harm in the value chain.
- Recognize common greenwashing risks and define evidence standards for sustainability claims.
- Escalate ethical concerns and non-compliance using appropriate governance channels.
- Select response strategies that balance cost, schedule, and sustainability performance.
- Create status reporting that includes sustainability KPIs alongside cost and schedule.
- Use variance analysis to identify when sustainability performance is drifting and why.
- Recommend corrective and preventive actions based on monitoring results.
- Document lessons learned related to sustainability practices, data, and stakeholder feedback.
- Prepare final sustainability performance summaries at project closure for handover and audits.
- Identify opportunities to standardize and scale effective sustainability practices.
Delivery Methods (50%)
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Task 1 — Initiate projects with sustainability built in
- Incorporate sustainability drivers and constraints into the business case and project charter.
- Identify sustainability-related stakeholders and document their needs and influence.
- Capture sustainability requirements as measurable outcomes, not just aspirational statements.
- Clarify project boundaries and assumptions that affect sustainability impacts.
- Define early success criteria that reflect both delivery and sustainability goals.
- Set up governance so sustainability decisions are made at the right cadence and level.
Task 2 — Plan scope, schedule, and budget with sustainability constraints
- Integrate sustainability requirements into the scope baseline (or backlog) and acceptance criteria.
- Plan work so sustainability tasks (analysis, mitigation, reporting) have time and owners.
- Budget for sustainability activities (assessments, audits, testing, training, reporting).
- Plan procurement with sustainability criteria for supplier selection and contract terms.
- Define quality standards that include sustainability performance and compliance checks.
- Plan risk responses that address sustainability impacts without breaking delivery constraints.
Task 3 — Execute work using sustainable practices
- Implement sustainable procurement practices and monitor supplier performance against criteria.
- Apply resource efficiency practices (energy, materials, travel) during execution.
- Manage waste and emissions reduction actions as part of day-to-day work planning.
- Communicate sustainability expectations to the team and reinforce them through routines.
- Document sustainability decisions and evidence so they are auditable and repeatable.
- Respond to issues quickly when delivery actions create unintended sustainability impacts.
Task 4 — Monitor, control, and govern sustainability during delivery
- Track sustainability KPIs and compliance checks at the same cadence as other controls.
- Use change control to evaluate sustainability impact before approving changes.
- Escalate sustainability variances and risks using defined thresholds and governance channels.
- Conduct reviews or audits to validate sustainability evidence and prevent drift.
- Balance corrective actions across scope, schedule, cost, quality, and sustainability outcomes.
- Update plans, registers, and stakeholder communications based on monitoring results.
Task 5 — Close and transition sustainably
- Verify sustainability acceptance criteria are met before final sign-off and handover.
- Complete closure documentation that captures sustainability performance and evidence.
- Plan transition so operational teams can maintain sustainability outcomes after handover.
- Capture benefits realization assumptions and how sustainability benefits will be tracked post-project.
- Close contracts with sustainability obligations verified and documented.
- Conduct a lessons-learned review focused on improving sustainable delivery practices.
Task 6 — Tailor delivery methods to support sustainability outcomes
- Select a delivery approach (predictive, agile, or hybrid) that fits sustainability constraints and uncertainty.
- Embed sustainability checks into stage gates, iterations, or review cycles.
- Use stakeholder feedback loops to validate sustainability impacts early and often.
- Prioritize work to reduce high-impact risks earlier in the delivery lifecycle.
- Adjust plans and practices when sustainability metrics show unintended outcomes.
- Standardize repeatable practices so sustainable delivery becomes easier over time.
Tip: For most questions, the “best answer” is the one that (1) clarifies impact, (2) makes it measurable, and (3) puts it under governance and monitoring.