Exam-focused answers on Project+ format, lifecycle decisions, risk versus issue handling, change control, documents, and study strategy.
Project+ tests project management fundamentals in real delivery contexts, especially technology work. CompTIA’s current PK0-005 objectives emphasize project management concepts, risk, issue handling, scheduling, communication, governance, and delivery-method choices. The exam is less about memorizing a single methodology and more about recognizing the most disciplined next step.
It is project management first, but framed for practical business and technology work. You do not need deep engineering detail, yet you do need to understand how change control, risk, communication, procurement, and scheduling affect technical delivery.
CompTIA lists the current Project+ exam as 90 minutes, up to 90 questions, with multiple-choice and performance-based items. The published passing score is 710 on a 100-900 scale.
The documents that appear repeatedly are the ones that control authority, scope, coordination, and change:
If you cannot distinguish those, the exam feels harder than it really is.
A risk is uncertain and may happen later. An issue has already happened and now requires action. Project+ will often show you a problem that has become real and then tempt you with “update the risk register” when the better answer is “log the issue, assign ownership, and resolve it.”
Project+ wants you to protect the baseline without becoming rigid for its own sake.
The safe pattern is:
“Just do it and update later” is almost always a trap.
Yes, but at the decision level:
The exam wants a reasonable match between delivery approach and project conditions, not ideology.
The critical path is the longest path through the schedule and determines finish date. Float or slack is the amount of time a task can move before it affects a later milestone or final completion. If a task has float, the right answer may be “monitor and re-sequence” rather than “escalate immediately.”
Under-communicating because the team thinks everyone already knows what changed. Project+ strongly prefers:
A focused 3-4 week plan works well for many learners:
Keep a one-line decision log from missed questions, such as “real problem = issue log, not risk register” or “scope change needs approval before execution.”
That depends on the role. If you are moving deeper into formal project management, PMP or CAPM may be the next move. If you are staying close to delivery operations, continue building actual project coordination habits: maintain schedules, logs, action items, and change records in real work instead of only studying the concepts.