Level 5Portfolio ManagementLevel 4Program ManagementLevel 3Project ManagementLevel 2Technical ManagementLevel 1Individual Task ManagementGeneralDomain-SpecificPRINCE2 PjMPRINCE2 PgMPRINCE2 PfMPMBOK GuidePMI PrgMPMI PfMISO 21502ISO 21503ISO 21504APM BoKPM²PgM²PfM²NUPPP1.expressP2.expressP4.expressP3.expressP5.expressµP3.expressIPMA ICBXPCrystalDSDMScrumLeSSNexusS@SSAFeKanban D.P. KanbanGTD

— Comparisons —

No Comparison Roadmap vs. Advice Minimalist vs. Maximalist Libre vs. Proprietary General vs. Domain-Specific

Landscape, general vs. domain-specific

Some systems are general and applicable to any industry, whereas some are created for specific ones and, to be more specific, only apply to organizations focused on developing software.

If you are in the software development industry, you’ll have more options, and otherwise, you need to make sure the system you select is applicable to your environment. Despite that, you can always learn and be inspired by systems that are not created for you.

Focusing on general systems has an advantage for individuals as well: Their expertise become portable, which gives them more options in their career.

PRINCE2®, MSP®, and MoP® are registered trademarks of AXELOS Limited.
PMBOK® is a registered trademark of the Project Management Institute, Inc.
APM BoK is a mark of Association for Project Management.
PM² is the property of the European Union.
ICB (Individual Competence Baseline) is the property of International Project Management Association (IPMA®)
DSDM® is a registered trademark of Agile Business Consortium Limited.
LeSS is the property of The LeSS Company B.V.
SAFe® is a registered trademark of Scaled Agile, Inc.
GTD® is a registered trademark of David Allen Company.