Continuing Professional Development (CPD) is a commitment to your professional growth. It shows you have taken personal responsibility for ensuring that you have the skills and knowledge necessary to meet the challenges of an ever-changing world.
CPD Resources
CMI Membership involves making a commitment to your ongoing professional development.
CMI provides a range of services to support you in this process, including our nationally recognised qualifications, the wealth of information available through our online resources, as well as routes to Chartered Manager and as your progress along your career journey.
These CPD resources can be accessed through your CMI Membership. Not yet a member? Take a look at our subscription and membership offers and Join the CMI Community today.
FAQs
Is CPD mandatory for CMI Members?
By joining CMI you are making a commitment to your ongoing professional development as a manager and leader in order to ensure that you have the necessary knowledge and skills to meet the challenges of your job. The CMI Code of Practice for Professional Managers states that adherence to the code, which includes an ongoing commitment to self-development, is a fundamental requirement of CMI membership.
Do I have to provide evidence of my CPD?
We recommend that all CMI members maintain a record of their CPD plans and activities. Also, if you wish to become a Chartered Manager you will be asked to submit evidence of your CPD to support your application, and every year a sample of Chartered Managers will be asked to submit their records for assessment.
How should I approach my CPD?
We recommend that good CPD is based on the following 4 stage cycle of Reflection, Planning, Action and Evaluation.
Sometimes learning can occur unexpectedly through experience, i.e. it may start at the Action stage rather with Reflection, but it is essential that all managers regularly reflect on how their knowledge and skills need to be updated and plan how they will achieve this.
How do I record my CPD?
CMI members can record their CPD in any format they find convenient, as long as it can provide evidence that all 4 stages of the CPD cycle as described above have been considered.
Recording options include:
The CMI online CPD system – this enables the ongoing recording and storage of objectives and activities online. Development activities undertaken using CMI resources are automatically recorded to save you time.
Two reports can be generated from the system:
Development Action Plan – this covers the Reflection and Planning stages of the cycle
Personal Development Record – this covers the Action and Evaluation stages of the cycle
CPD records prepared for other professional bodies – if you are already keeping CPD records to meet the requirements of another professional body then you may be able to use these to record your CPD in respect of your management and leadership skills as long as they provide clear evidence that they cover all stages of the CPD cycle.
Records completed as part of your organisation’s processes for appraisal, performance development review (PDR) or personal development planning - these may be submitted if these appropriately evidence compliance with the CPD cycle or a part of it. These records will need to be clear in evidencing CPD compliance; if they need interpretation you may need to extract relevant information and present it in another format – for example, using the report templates mentioned above.
What counts as CPD?
Anything that increases your knowledge and skills in a way that makes you a more effective manager and leader can be considered valid CPD. An effective CPD activity must have a clear learning outcome (an output) that is independent of the activity itself (the input).
It is not just about attending formal training courses. Informal learning gained through experience in the workplace can also be extremely important, as can self-directed learning.
Valid CPD activities can include the following:
Attending events
Conferences
Seminars/webinars
Exhibitions
Networking events
Structured learning
Embarking upon, working towards and completing a qualification
Training courses, including in-company programmes
Tests
Informal or self-directed learning
Reading journals, books, research papers etc., e.g. from ManagementDirect
Viewing multimedia resources e.g. videos, e-learning etc., e.g. from ManagementDirect
Coaching and mentoring
Experiential or “on-the-job” learning
Voluntary and other activities
We recommend that effective CPD should be multi-faceted, i.e. include a range of different activities that include self-directed study and opportunities to learn from other people in both formal and informal settings.
How do I gain CPD points or hours?
CMI’s approach is to focus on the impacts and outputs from CPD rather than on inputs. What this means is that we are interested in what has actually been learnt or achieved by completing development activities rather than in measuring them in terms of the hours they took or by awarding points for completion. For example, you may attend a training course that is two days long from which you learn nothing new. Alternatively, you may gain an invaluable insight that will increase your professional effectiveness from watching a 5-minute video or having a brief conversation with a colleague.
So whilst some other professional bodies do measure CPD in terms of points or hours, CMI does not. (For guidance on how your CPD with CMI may meet the requirements of another professional body’s CPD policy please contact that organisation.)
How do you select which Chartered Managers will have to submit evidence of their CPD?
Every year a sample of Chartered Managers will be asked to submit their records for assessment. Therefore it is vital that CPD records are kept up-to-date throughout the year.
We anticipate the sample size will be around 10% of all Chartered Managers excluding:
Those awarded within the last twelve month
Those who have completed a renewal under the pre-June 2012 criteria within the last twelve months
Please note: We reserve the right to request CPD records from any Chartered Manager at any time. The fact of having been asked to submit records during one year does not provide any exemption for subsequent years.
If I’m asked to submit my CPD records how much time will I have to do this?
We ask for records to be submitted within 30 days of our request. If records are not received after CMI has sent reminders and taken reasonable steps to contact the individual concerned then, in the absence of any reasonable mitigating circumstances, we would remove Chartered status and downgrade the individual’s membership accordingly.
How exactly should I submit my evidence, if asked to do so?
Submissions should be in an electronic format that can clearly show that the four stages of the CPD cycle outlined above have been considered.
We recommend using the two CMI templates:
Development Action Review (Reflection and Planning)
Personal Development Record (Action and Evaluation)
The CMI online CPD system will generate these reports automatically using evidence that you have stored within it. Alternatively, blank templates can be downloaded for you to complete manually using the links above. Details of where your evidence should be sent will be provided when you are informed that you have been selected to submit.
How will my CPD records be assessed?
Our assessors will be looking for clear evidence that all four stages of the CPD cycle have been considered so that there has been:
Reflection on development needs
Planning of activities to meet these needs (although not all learning has to be planned)
Action in the form of a variety of developmental activities
Evaluation of the learning outcomes of these activities and their impact at work
What happens if my CPD records are assessed as not having met CMI’s requirements?
If CPD records submitted do not, in our assessor’s view, meet CMI’s requirements then the assessor will contact the Chartered Manager concerned and explain their reasons. The individual will then be asked to re-submit their records taking into account the assessor’s feedback. Should a second submission still fail to meet CMI’s requirements, and in the absence of any reasonable mitigating circumstances, then we would remove Chartered status and downgrade the individual’s membership accordingly.
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