Compiling a list of what's actually useful for CEP prep after going through a lot of material that wasn't. Wanted to share what worked for me and hopefully save others some time.
For study guide specifically, the free resources are surprisingly good. The cep energy market fundamentals has questions that closely match real exam difficulty — not dumbed-down versions that give you false confidence. For the conceptual background, certified energy procurement professionals is one of the better free reads available.
What I'd skip: most YouTube "pass in one week" content. The explanations are surface-level and don't prepare you for the applied questions on the actual CEP exam. Flashcards alone also aren't enough for this one.
What actually worked: timed practice sets with immediate review of wrong answers, reading the official reference material for any concept that came up more than twice, and finding one study partner for accountability.
Good thread. One thing I'd add: don't try to cram the night before. I did 2 hours the night before my CEP and I think it hurt more than helped. Your brain needs consolidation time. Light review or full rest is better.
Really helpful breakdown, thanks for sharing. I'm at week 5 of my CEP prep and the exam prep section is exactly where I'm struggling too. Going to try the approach you described and see if it moves my scores.
Coming back to this thread — just passed my CEP yesterday. Everything about the cep practice test section is accurate. For anyone still studying, the free cep energy market fundamentals was the closest thing to the real exam I found.
I failed my first attempt and honestly it came down to energy market fundamentals — I'd been studying the regulatory stuff pretty hard but completely underestimated how much the market mechanics would show up. Second time around I shifted my focus and it made a real difference. The free practice questions are actually solid for this, way better than I expected.
What I'd tell anyone who didn't pass the first time: don't just re-read the same material. Figure out which domain tripped you up and go deep on that specifically. For me it wasn't that I didn't know the content, it's that I hadn't seen enough question variations to recognize how they phrase things on the actual exam. More practice questions, less rereading notes.
Quick update since I posted last week -- hit a 74% on my most recent practice set which honestly surprised me. I'd been stuck in the low 60s for a while so something finally clicked, probably just the repetition. Planning to sit the actual exam in late July if I can keep this momentum going.
Still got some weak spots in the financial risk side of things but it's not as bad as it was. If you're in the same boat just keep grinding the practice questions, that's really what moved the needle for me more than reading anything.
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