Curriculum Overview

A Modern Curriculum for Program Leadership

Explore the Professional Program Leader (PPL) Certification curriculum, designed to blend Agile, business acumen, and hands-on experience for real-world impact.

What You Will Learn

Core Curriculum Pillars

The PPL curriculum is structured around three pillars, each critical to leadership excellence in complex, modern organizations.

Agile Program Leadership

Master the principles and practices of Agile program management, including scaling frameworks and adaptive leadership.

Business Acumen

Develop strategic thinking, financial literacy, and stakeholder engagement for impactful decision-making.

Hands-On Immersion

Engage in practical, real-world projects and simulations to apply leadership skills in dynamic environments.

Program Structure

The PPL program combines online modules, live workshops, and guided mentorship to ensure comprehensive development.

Online Learning

Flexible, self-paced modules covering foundational and advanced topics.

Residency Workshops

Intensive, live sessions for deep dives and collaborative learning.

Mentorship

Personalized guidance from experienced program leaders and coaches.

Capstone Project

Apply your learning to a real-world leadership challenge.

Key Curriculum Modules

Each module is crafted to build your leadership capability, from foundational skills to advanced program management.

Strategic leadership training

Strategic Leadership

Learn to align vision with execution, manage change, and drive organizational outcomes.

Agile and adaptive delivery workshop

Agile & Adaptive Delivery

Develop expertise in Agile methodologies, risk management, and iterative program delivery.

Stakeholder engagement in leadership

Stakeholder Engagement

Master communication, influence, and relationship-building with key stakeholders.

Program Management Curriculum – Standard 5th Edition

📘 Program Management Curriculum

Teaching The Standard for Program Management – 5th Edition

12 Comprehensive Modules

Fully Aligned to the Standard’s Structure

This comprehensive curriculum covers all aspects of program management as defined in the 5th Edition Standard. Each module combines theoretical knowledge with practical application, ensuring learners can immediately apply concepts to real-world scenarios.

1

Foundations of Program Management

Standard Ch. 1–2

Topics

  • Definition of a Program
  • Difference between Projects, Programs, and Portfolios
  • Program Management Principles
  • The Program Manager Role
  • Environmental Considerations
  • Organizational Strategy Linkage
2

Program Strategy & Alignment

Ch. 3.3

Topics

  • Organizational vision, mission, and strategic plan
  • Strategic alignment as a continuous activity
  • Program business case
  • Program charter
  • Program success metrics and strategic mapping

Key Artifacts

  • Business Case
  • Program Charter
3

Program Life Cycle Overview

Ch. 3.8

Topics

  • Program Definition Phase
  • Program Delivery Phase
  • Program Closure Phase
  • How phases may iterate
  • Program formulation vs. program planning
4

Program Definition Phase

Ch. 3.8.1

Topics

  • Program formulation
  • Developing the business case
  • Selecting the program manager
  • Performing initial assessments
  • Developing the program management plan
  • Initial risk assessment

Key Artifacts

  • Preliminary Assessments
  • Program Management Plan
5

Program Roadmap & Architecture

Ch. 3.3.3

Topics

  • Purpose of the program roadmap
  • Component structure
  • Dependency logic
  • Strategic sequencing
  • Benefits linkage to components

Key Artifacts

  • Roadmap
  • Component Diagram
6

Benefits Management Performance Domain

Ch. 3.4

Topics

  • Benefits identification
  • Benefits analysis and planning
  • Benefits delivery
  • Benefits transition
  • Benefits sustainment (post-program)
  • Role of KPIs and measurement points
  • Risk to benefits

Key Artifacts

  • Benefits Management Plan
  • Benefits Register
  • Benefits Realization Plan
  • Sustainment Plan
7

Stakeholder Engagement Performance Domain

Ch. 3.5

Topics

  • Identifying stakeholders
  • Stakeholder analysis techniques
  • Power/interest/influence mapping
  • Engagement strategies
  • Communication channels and feedback loops
  • Managing resistance

Key Artifacts

  • Stakeholder Matrix
  • Stakeholder Engagement Plan
  • Communications Plan
8

Governance Performance Domain

Ch. 3.6

Topics

  • Governance roles and responsibilities
  • Governance board / steering committee
  • Decision rights
  • Escalation paths
  • Stage gates and phase reviews
  • Governance vs. management

Key Artifacts

  • Governance Framework
  • Governance Plan
  • Stage Gate Criteria
9

Program Life Cycle: Delivery Phase

Ch. 3.8.2

Topics

  • Component initiation
  • Planning & integration
  • Component oversight
  • Interdependency management
  • Risk, change, schedule, quality management
  • Delivering incremental benefits
  • Maintaining alignment

Key Artifacts

  • Component Authorization Package
  • Program Master Schedule
  • Issue Log
  • Decision Log
10

Program Life Cycle: Closure Phase

Ch. 3.8.3

Topics

  • Closing components
  • Deliverable acceptance
  • Program closure activities
  • Archiving and knowledge transfer
  • Residual risk transfer
  • Transition to operations
  • Final performance evaluation

Key Artifacts

  • Closure Report
  • Lessons Learned
  • Transition Plan
11

Integrated Program Controls

Ch. 4.3

Topics

  • Change management
  • Communications management
  • Financial management
  • Information/PMIS management
  • Procurement management
  • Quality management
  • Resource management
  • Risk management
  • Schedule management
  • Scope management

Key Artifacts

  • Subsidiary Plans
  • Risk Register
  • Change Log
12

Integration, Application & Capstone

Topics

  • How the five performance domains interact
  • Traceability: strategy → benefits → components
  • Interdependency oversight
  • Using the Standard to govern large-scale programs
  • Ethical considerations in program management

🎓 Capstone Project: Complete Program Binder

Students integrate all learning by building a comprehensive program package containing:

✓ Business Case
✓ Program Charter
✓ Roadmap
✓ Benefits Management Plan
✓ Governance Plan
✓ Stakeholder Engagement Plan
✓ Program Management Plan
✓ Closure/Transition Strategy
Agile Program Leadership – Intensive Course

Agile Program Leadership

Transform Your Portfolio from Projects to Value Streams

⏱ Intensive
🎯 Hands-On Activities
📊 Real-World Simulations

In today’s fast-changing business environment, traditional program and portfolio management often struggle to keep pace—resulting in misaligned priorities, slow decision-making, and wasted investment. This immersive 2-day course equips leaders, portfolio managers, program managers, and PMO professionals with the mindset and tools to deliver strategic outcomes at speed and scale.

You’ll explore the full spectrum of Agile Program & Portfolio Management, from defining and governing strategic initiatives to coordinating cross-functional delivery teams. We’ll cover how Agile Program Management enables visibility, alignment, and dependency management across multiple teams and value streams, while Lean Portfolio Management connects those programs directly to business strategy and customer value.

Through hands-on activities, simulations, and real-world case examples, you’ll leave with a toolkit to transform your programs and portfolios from a collection of disconnected projects into a dynamic, value-driven delivery system.

👥 Who Should Attend

Executives • Portfolio Managers • Program Managers • PMO Leads • Product Management Leaders • Agile Coaches • Anyone Responsible for Prioritizing and Delivering Strategic Initiatives

🎯 Learning Objectives

Understand the principles and practices of Agile Program & Portfolio Management
Apply Lean Portfolio Management to connect strategy to execution
Establish clear strategic themes, value streams, and guardrails for funding and governance
Use Agile prioritization to maximize value delivery
Monitor portfolio health using leading and lagging indicators
Shift from project-based funding to value-based funding
Facilitate continuous alignment through effective cadence and feedback loops

⚠ Common Anti-Patterns We’ll Address

Faster Waterfall
Treating Agile as simply faster waterfall rather than a mindset shift
Fake Value Delivery
Maintaining project-based funding while claiming value delivery
Priority Overload
Overloading teams with too many priorities, reducing flow and quality
Output Over Outcomes
Focusing on output metrics instead of business outcomes
Strategy Disconnect
Failing to connect strategy to delivery, leaving teams guessing on priorities
Command & Control
Running governance as command-and-control rather than enabling decision-making

📋 Prerequisites

Must-Have

  • High-level understanding of Agile mindset, principles, and values
  • Core Agile practices, roles, and ceremonies across Scrum and Kanban
  • Understanding of at least one team-level delivery framework

Strongly Recommended

  • Ability to maintain and refine product or team backlogs
  • Familiarity with techniques for evaluating and ranking work items based on business value
  • Understanding of how to connect team outputs to customer and business value
  • Awareness of enterprise level Agile frameworks and strategies

📚 Course Topics

  • Introduction

    • Why traditional portfolio management fails in a dynamic market
    • The case for Agile & Lean Portfolio Management
    • Shifting from projects to products/value streams
  • Foundations of Agile Program & Portfolio Management

    • The roles of strategy, programs, and teams in delivery
    • Alignment over control
    • Core principles of Lean Portfolio Management
    • Group discussion: Map your current portfolio to the value delivery model
  • Aligning Strategy with Delivery

    • Creating and communicating strategic themes
    • Mapping value streams to strategy
    • Outcome-based objectives (OKRs) and success measures
    • Roadmaps that connect strategy to delivery
    • Activity: Draft a strategy-to-value-stream map for a real initiative
  • Lean Portfolio Practices & Governance

    • Portfolio Kanban for visibility & flow
    • Lean Budgeting & Guardrails
    • Decentralized decision-making
    • Funding value streams instead of projects
    • Simulation: Build a simple portfolio Kanban & prioritize initiatives
  • Prioritization & Capacity Management

    • Weighted Shortest Job First (WSJF) & other prioritization techniques
    • Managing capacity across value streams
    • Balancing strategic vs. operational work
    • Hands-on: Run a WSJF prioritization session for sample initiatives
  • Measuring Portfolio Health

    • Leading vs. lagging indicators
    • Value delivery metrics
    • Feedback loops & quarterly business reviews (QBRs)
    • Activity: Define metrics for your portfolio dashboard
  • Cadence & Continuous Alignment

    • Synchronizing strategy, funding, and delivery cadences
    • Portfolio review ceremonies
    • Adapting plans based on feedback & data
    • Role-play: Run a mock Portfolio Sync meeting
  • Wrap-Up & Next Steps

    • Key takeaways
    • Your 90-day action plan
    • Resources & tools

🚀 Ready to Transform Your Portfolio?

Leave with practical techniques including value stream mapping, outcome-based objectives, portfolio Kanban, adaptive funding, and prioritization frameworks.

📊 Portfolio Kanban
💰 Lean Budgeting
🎯 WSJF Prioritization
📈 Value Stream Mapping
🔄 OKRs & Outcomes
REAL Leadership for Professional Program Leaders

REAL Leadership

For the Professional Program Leader (PPL)

At the program and portfolio level, success is no longer defined by task execution, tools, or technical mastery alone. It is defined by influence, judgment, and sustained value delivery.

Praizion’s REAL framework—Relationships, Equipping, Attitude, and Leadership—is elevated in the PPL certification to reflect the realities of executive-level program leadership.

This is not an abstract philosophy. It is a practical operating model for leaders responsible for multiple initiatives, strategic outcomes, and enterprise alignment.

R
Relationships

At the Executive Level

For a Professional Program Leader, relationships extend far beyond the team.

PPL-level relationships include:

  • Executives and sponsors
  • Functional and business unit leaders
  • Portfolio decision-makers
  • Customers, partners, and vendors
  • Program and project leaders across initiatives

At this level, trust is currency. The PPL develops the ability to:

  • Navigate competing priorities and power dynamics
  • Build alignment without authority
  • Manage conflict constructively and early
  • Translate strategy into language stakeholders understand
E
Equipping

Like a Leader, Not a Manager

Equipping at the PPL level means multiplying capability, not hoarding knowledge.

Professional Program Leaders:

  • Develop leaders, not just deliverables
  • Create systems that enable teams to succeed without constant oversight
  • Share frameworks, judgment models, and decision logic
  • Become a river, not a reservoir—knowledge flows outward

Through coaching, mentoring, and real-time feedback, PPL candidates learn how to:

  • Equip project and program managers to think strategically
  • Build sustainable delivery capacity
  • Reduce dependency while increasing accountability
  • Create learning cultures that outlast individual initiatives

This is leadership that scales.

A
Attitude

Yours, and the Attitudes You Shape

At the program level, attitude is contagious—and consequential.

The PPL certification places strong emphasis on:

  • Personal composure under pressure
  • Executive presence and professionalism
  • Growth mindset in the face of ambiguity
  • Psychological safety and constructive challenge

Equally important is the leader’s ability to shape the attitudes of others:

  • Toward change rather than resistance
  • Toward collaboration rather than silos
  • Toward value rather than activity
  • Toward learning rather than blame

This is where Agile thinking truly lives—not as ceremonies or tools, but as an adaptive mindset that allows programs to pivot while maintaining direction.

L
Leadership

The Five Levels Applied

The PPL framework aligns leadership development with John Maxwell’s Five Levels of Leadership, applied specifically to program and portfolio environments.

The PPL certification is intentionally designed to move participants beyond Levels 1 and 2, and firmly into Levels 3, 4, and 5, where true program leadership lives.

See the Five Levels section below for details.

The Five Levels of Leadership

Applied to Program and Portfolio Environments

1 Position – Authority granted by role
Necessary, but insufficient at scale.
2 Permission – Trust-based relationships
People follow because they trust your intent.
3 Production – Results and value delivery
Programs deliver outcomes, not just outputs.
4 People Development – Growing other leaders
You build leaders who build leaders.
5 Pinnacle – Influence beyond your role
Your leadership shapes culture, standards, and legacy.

REAL Success: Beyond Certification

Praizion’s approach recognizes that passing an exam is not the same as leading effectively.

Applying PMI principles with discernment, not memorization
Combining Agile and predictive thinking pragmatically
Leading people, not just managing work
Delivering sustained value in complex, changing environments

Through hands-on endeavors, coaching, and peer-level engagement, PPL candidates demonstrate capability through real outcomes, not test questions in isolation.

The PPL Advantage

The Professional Program Leader certification stands apart because it:

Integrates
leadership, business acumen, and delivery
Emphasizes
real-world application over theory alone
Develops
executive-level thinking and influence
Builds
a community of like-minded, high-caliber leaders

This is a pathway for professionals who want more than a credential—who want the capacity to lead at scale.

REAL leadership. REAL capability. REAL impact.

Professional Program Leader Certification by Praizion

Advance Your Leadership Journey

Ready to elevate your career with the Professional Program Leader (PPL) Certification? Join our next cohort and take the next step in your leadership development.