PMI-ACP in Doha
PMI's agile certification covering Scrum, Kanban, Lean, XP, and SAFe — ideal for PMs transitioning to agile delivery.
What is PMI-ACP?
The PMI Agile Certified Practitioner (PMI-ACP) is PMI's premier credential for professionals who lead and deliver agile projects across frameworks like Scrum, Kanban, SAFe, and XP. In Doha, where Qatar's Vision 2030 is driving massive investment in technology, construction, and public sector transformation, organizations are actively seeking project leaders who can navigate complexity with agile methods. The PMI-ACP signals to employers that you hold both the practical experience and the theoretical grounding to lead agile teams effectively. With a growing number of multinational firms, government-linked entities, and tech startups operating out of Doha, holding this credential puts you in a strong position in a competitive and increasingly agile-aware talent market.
At an exam cost of $495 USD and an average salary uplift of $15,000 per year, the PMI-ACP delivers one of the strongest ROI ratios of any intermediate-level IT certification. With average IT salaries in Doha sitting around $70,000 per year, certified professionals can realistically push into the $85,000+ range — a 21% increase from a single credential. Qatar's project-heavy economy, fueled by infrastructure development, smart city initiatives, and financial sector modernization, creates sustained demand for agile-certified talent. The three-year renewal cycle means your investment stays relevant, and the international recognition of PMI credentials gives you leverage not just in Doha but across the broader Gulf Cooperation Council job market.
Exam details
Prerequisites: 2,000 hours general project experience + 1,500 hours agile experience + 21 hours agile education
12-week study plan
Exam tips
Learn to recognize the 'agile mindset' answer — PMI-ACP questions are heavily situational and favor responses that prioritize collaboration, transparency, and continuous improvement over process compliance or escalation
Don't study only Scrum. The PMI-ACP covers Kanban, XP, lean, SAFe, and DSDM — questions will reference all of them, and gaps in any framework will cost you marks
Memorize the agile tools and techniques listed in the ECO appendix — items like information radiators, velocity tracking, and retrospective formats appear directly in exam questions
Practice reading PMI-ACP questions slowly. Many wrong answers are partially correct but fail on one key agile principle — the distinction is subtle and requires careful reading under time pressure
Use the Agile Practice Guide (co-published by PMI and the Agile Alliance) as your primary reference — it is the closest thing to an official syllabus and its language maps directly to how exam questions are worded