I'm registered for the CSCP exam in August and starting my 12-week study plan now. I've been in supply chain for eight years, currently a procurement manager at a mid-size manufacturer. My company is covering the exam fee so there's pressure to pass on the first attempt - I don't want to explain why I need a second shot.
I've got the APICS learning system and I'm working through it systematically, about 10 hours a week. The three modules are SCOR, supply chain design, and implementation. I feel strongest in implementation given my day job, and weakest on SCOR metrics and the design frameworks. That's where I'm planning to concentrate time.
Anyone who's passed recently: how representative are the APICS practice questions compared to the actual exam? I've heard the real thing is more scenario-based and less definition-heavy, and I'm trying to calibrate my prep accordingly. Also wondering if 12 weeks is reasonable or if I should be more concerned than I am right now.
SCOR was my weak spot too and I spent the last three weeks of prep almost entirely on that module. The exam expects you to know the five performance attributes and how to calculate cycle time and cost-to-serve for different network configurations. Flashcards helped me more than re-reading the material.
Passed on my first attempt in November. My advice: do all the end-of-module practice questions twice and time yourself on the second pass. The exam is 3.5 hours for 150 questions - time management is trickier than people expect, especially on the longer scenario prompts.
Your experience as a procurement manager will help a lot on the implementation module but don't assume you know it - some of the APICS framing differs from real-world practice.
12 weeks at 10 hours a week is plenty if you're already in supply chain professionally. I passed with about 90 hours total prep over 10 weeks. The APICS practice questions are decent but the actual exam does lean more scenario-based, so make sure you understand the 'why' behind SCOR metrics, not just the definitions.
Eight years in supply chain is a real advantage. I came into CSCP from a finance background and it took me 15 weeks to feel ready. You should be fine at 12 weeks. Focus your energy on SCOR - it's the most heavily weighted module and the one where people with practical experience sometimes overestimate their readiness.
Just passed mine in April so I'll tell you what actually clicked for me. The APICS CSCP Learning System is dense and I spent weeks reading it cover to cover thinking that was enough. It wasn't. What finally moved the needle was drilling practice questions by domain instead of just reading, especially for supply chain design where the questions trip you up with near-identical answer choices. I found the cscp supply chain design practice tests really helpful for that specific module because it forced me to actually apply the concepts instead of just recognizing them.
Eight years of experience is honestly a double-edged sword. You'll breeze through parts that feel like common sense, but you might second-guess yourself on APICS terminology because the "right" answer isn't always what you'd do in real life. Trust the framework, not your gut. With 12 weeks you've got plenty of time if you're consistent.