avatarAnthony Mersino

Summary

The Project Management Institute (PMI) appears to be phasing out its Disciplined Agile certifications due to lack of market traction and potential strategic decisions to favor the PMP certification.

Abstract

The article suggests that PMI is quietly discontinuing its Disciplined Agile (DA) certifications, which were launched in 2019. The evidence for this is the lack of promotion and updates, as well as the poor performance of DA certifications compared to other PMI offerings and competitors like Scrum.org and Scrum Alliance. The author speculates that this could be unintentional, due to PMI's inability to effectively support new certifications, or intentional, to protect the PMP certification's dominance. The latter is supported by the inclusion of more agile content in the PMBOK Guide, potentially rendering DA certifications redundant. Despite a recent LinkedIn post by PMI's President and CEO, Pierre Le Manh, promoting DA, the overall trend indicates a significant decline in DA certifications since PMI's acquisition.

Opinions

  • The author believes that PMI's lack of promotion and the minimal increase in DA certifications suggest a deliberate phasing out of the Disciplined Agile product line.
  • It is possible that PMI is not intentionally killing off Disciplined Agile, but rather struggling to nurture and promote a new certification effectively.
  • The high costs for Authorized Training Partners, annual re-certification fees for individuals, and the incorporation of agile content into the PMBOK Guide may have contributed to the decline of Disciplined Agile certifications.
  • The author hints at a strategic move by PMI to maintain the PMP certification as the premier offering, possibly avoiding the cannibalization of its own market share by more modern agile certifications.
  • The article implies that the market response to Disciplined Agile certifications has been underwhelming, with low adoption rates compared to other agile certifications in the industry.

PMI Is Quietly Killing Disciplined Agile

PMI is quietly killing off Disciplined Agile, the product that they launched in 2019.

I haven’t written about Disciplined Agile in a while. And for good reason — there really isn’t much to write about. In fact, things are so quiet that I am pretty sure that PMI is quietly killing off Disciplined Agile.

Why Is PMI Killing Off Disciplined Agile?

Who knows?

Perhaps it is not Intentional

It could be completely unintentional. It is possible that PMI is not agile enough to nurture and launch a new certification like Disciplined Agile. This reason will make sense if you look at all the newer certifications from PMI that have gained little or no traction in the market.

Check out the list of non-PMP certifications below and the net increase in the last two years. Only the 11-year-old PMI-ACP has done moderately well and even that is nowhere near the success of the Project Management Professional (PMP).

Perhaps it was a lack of promotion. When was the last time you heard anything about the DA Certifications from PMI? It’s all crickets on DA since Mark Lines, Scott Ambler and Alan Shalloway all took their payout and exited PMI.

Perhaps it was the structure of Disciplined Agile itself that made it difficult. Unlike the PMI-ACP, training and certification for Disciplined Agile required an Authorized Training partner. After paying the annual fees for Authorized Training Partners ($6,999 or $9,999) and the course material fees of $180 per student, there is little margin left for partners.

Perhaps it was the requirement that those who achieve the Discipline Agile certifications need to re-certify (i.e. pay PMI) every year. I wrote about my own exasperation in, Why I did not Renew My PMI, Agile and Scrum Certifications.

Maybe PMI is Killing Disciplined Agile on Purpose

Or perhaps it is intentional. There is a strong argument for this. Who wants to cannibalize the growth of the PMP cash cow in favor of modern ways of working? Isn’t this the innovator’s dilemma?

Lending credence to this view is the fact that PMI incorporated significant amounts of agile content into the PMBOK Guide. The 2021 release of the Seventh Edition contains significantly fewer prescriptions and more agile ways of working. The 2017 Agile Practice Guide has been incorporated into the appendix of the PMBOK Guide and a new chapter, The Project Manager’s Role in Agile, has been added. And Agile content has been incorporated throughout.

However, the theory that PMI is killing Disciplined Agile on purpose is inconsistent with a recent LinkedIn post from current PMI President and CEO, Pierre Le Manh. Le Manh touted the benefits of Disciplined Agile in his post. It is one of the few times I have heard anyone from PMI promote the DA certifications.

Is it possible that Le Manh is trying to throw us off his trail?

PMI Disciplined Agile Certifications Just Aren’t Popular

The Disciplined Agile Certifications have faired poorly as I have discussed in several posts.

The chart below shows the most recent stats for the DA certifications as of March 31, 2023.

So in the nearly 4 years since PMI purchased Disciplined Agile, they’ve registered 9,500 certifications. Meanwhile, Scrum.org and Scrum Alliance each log more certifications than this every month.

Bottom Line — PMI and Agile Certifications

The handwriting is on the wall. Either by neglect or intention, the Disciplined Agile certifications from PMI are dying.

Please do us all a favor and call the time of death. It would be a mercy killing.

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Anthony Mersino is the founder of Vitality Chicago, an Agile Training and Coaching firm devoted to helping Teams THRIVE and Organizations TRANSFORM. He is also the author of two books, Agile Project Management, and Emotional Intelligence for Project Managers.

If you enjoyed this post, you might be interested in the following:

Disciplined Agile
Agile Certification
Pmi
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