About CCAM Certified Control Account Manager Certification CCAM Certified Control Account Manager credential certification is the number one certification in the world for Control Account Managers (CAMs) and is given at all the leading global Aerospace & Defense companies from Boeing to Lockheed Martin to General Dynamics to QinetiQ CCAM Certified Control Account Manager credential certification for Control Account Managers (CAMs) covers the most comprehensive and detailed training program in industry today on how to effectively build, manage and control your Control Accounts on your projects/programs and deliver successful outcomes. CCAM Certified Control Account Manager provides you with the strategies, skills, know-how, competencies, best practices and methods on how to get your control accounts and Project deliverables planned, executed, monitored and controlled within budget, on time, and within top quality. EVMI Earned Value Management Institute s CCAM Certified Control Account Manager Credential Certification program is 40 hours in duration and all CCAM participants are given up to three weeks after class to complete related exercises for their My CCAM Briefcase which includes creating the Control Account Manager (C AM) notebook which is a requirement for US Department of Defense (DoD) and Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA) Earned Value Management Systems (EVMS) certification. To become a CCAM Certified Control Account Manager, all participants must complete their My CCAM Briefcase with a score of 80% or above. Participants are given up to 3 weeks to complete and submit their My CCAM Briefcase. All CCAM Participants must complete and present a given Case Study. See below: CASE STUDY: All CCAM Participants must complete a given Case Study during the first 4 days and on Day 5 present as a group. The Case study is completed in groups of 20 Participants. Sponsoring companies must sponsor 20 participants per each group Page 1
CCAM Certified Control Account Manager Requirements CCAM Certified Control Account Manager credential certification consists of TWELVE modules delivered from Day 1 through Day 4, and the modules are namely: (1) Leadership; Managing Change; Strategy, Execution (2) Program Management & Project Management (3) Responsibilities and Functions of the Control Account Manager; Control Account Management; Control Account Planning; Control Account Manager Notebook Preparation; Control Account Manager Planning (3) Project Controls; Risk Management, ISO 31000 Risk Standards, Earned Value Management (EVM) Applications & Analytics, Scheduling Management, & Quality Management on Control Accounts, ISO 9001: 2015 Quality Standards (5) Program Finance, Budgeting & Accounting (6) EIA-748-C Earned Value Management Systems Industry Standards Implementation (7) Project Communications & Managing Effective Integrated Baseline Reviews (IBRs) (8) Fraud Detection & Prevention (9) Compliance with Federal Government Standards, Regulations, Laws and Industry Standards; Management Controls (10) CCAM Certified Control Account Manager Integrity, Ethics and Professional Responsibility (11) Case Studies on very large multi-billion are given (12) Role play by all Participants WHO MAY APPLY: All Control Account Managers (CAMs), managers, Project Managers, Technical leads and Program Managers who plan, lead, direct manage, and monitor Control Accounts on very large projects and programs (multimillion/ billion dollar valued) Control Account Manager (CAM) Certification Levels: CCAM Certified Control Account Manager certification is the level one certification for Control Account Managers (CAMs): www.evmi.com/ccam EVMD/EVMO Earned Value Management Director/Earned Value Management Officer is the level two certification for Control Account Managers (CAMs): www.evmi.com/evmd-evmo Page 2
Lockheed Martin (U.S.) Boeing (U.S.) BAE Systems (U.K.) Raytheon (U.S.) General Dynamics (U.S.) Northrop Grumman (U.S.) Airbus Group (Netherlands) United Technologies (U.S.) Thales (France) Finmeccanica (Italy) L-3 Communications (U.S.) Huntington Ingalls (U.S.) Rolls-Royce (U.K.) Honeywell (U.S.) DCNS (France) Textron (U.S.) Booz Allen Hamilton (U.S.) GE (U.S.) Exelis (U.S.) Leidos (U.S.) Hewlett-Packard (U.S.) Safran (France) Babcock International (U.K.) Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (Japan) Oshkosh (U.S.) Page 3
Rheinmetall (Germany) Saab (Sweden) Elbit Systems (Israel) SAIC (U.S.) CACI International (U.S.) URS (U.S.) Israel Aerospace Industries (Israel) Bechtel (U.S.) ATK (U.S.) DynCorp (U.S.) Hindustan Aeronautics (India) Harris (U.S.) CSC (U.S.) Rockwell Collins (U.S.) Mantech (U.S.) Fluor (U.S.) General Atomics (U.S.) Serco (U.K.) Rafael Advanced Defense Systems (Israel) ST Engineering (Singapore) Dassault Aviation (France) Cobham (U.K.) Fincantieri (Italy) GenCorp (U.S.) Korea Aerospace Industries (South Korea) Kongsberg (Norway) Page 4
Krauss-Maffei Wegmann LIG Nex1 (South Korea) Nexter (France) Patria (Finland) Meggitt (U.K.) Kawasaki Heavy Industries (Japan) Aselsan (Turkey) GKN Aerospace (U.K.) Chemring (U.K.) Samsung Techwin (South Korea) Accenture (Ireland) Moog (U.S.) Bharat Electronics (India) NEC (Japan) Cubic (U.S.) AAR (U.S.) Alion Science and Technology (U.S.) Turkish Aerospace Industries (Turkey) CAE (Canada) Curtiss-Wright (U.S.) RUAG (Switzerland) Diehl Defence Group (Germany) PAE (U.S.) Ultra Electronics (U.K.) Indra (Spain) Page 5
Ball Aerospace & Technologies (U.S.) Wyle (U.S.) FLIR (U.S.) Battelle (U.S.) Jacobs Engineering (U.S.) ViaSat (U.S.) Israel Military Industries Navistar (U.S.) Nammo (Norway) Day & Zimmermann (U.S.) IHI (Japan) Mission Essential (U.S.) Griffon (U.S.) Mitsubishi Electric Embraer (Brazil) QinetiQ (U.K.) Page 6