Last week, the CFP Board issued a press release announcing that it was transitioning from a paper-based test to a computer-based testing process, in an effort to improve the ease and efficiency of the test-taking experience for CFP certification candidates. The move to computer-based testing will allow the CFP Board to issue preliminary results immediately, offer official results in just 1-2 weeks (down from 5 weeks with the paper-based exam), and dramatically expand the breadth of available testing locations.
Yet in a surprising and dramatic change that was explained as little more than a side "benefit" to the computer-based exam process, the CFP Board also announced that the length of the CFP exam going forward would be chopped by a whopping 40%, from 285 exam questions down to only 170, while the duration of the exam itself is reduced from a 10-hour day-and-a-half exam into a 6-hour single-day exam.
While the CFP Board maintains that this is not a change in how hard the CFP exam really is - i.e., the difficulty of the exam isn't meant to be increased nor decreased by the change, because the (fewer) questions themselves will still be targeted for similar difficulty - the question arises nonetheless why the CFP Board would implement such a change, if the goal wasn't to at least create the perception that the exam will be easier and therefore more appealing to take? Which in turn raises the question - did the CFP Board just lower the standards of the CFP exam and try to make it easier to grow the ranks of CFP certificants?