Six Sigma Certification
Six Sigma (Green Belt and Black Belt) by American Society for Quality (ASQ), IASSC, or employer-administered
Who Is Eligible?
Requirements
Green Belt: 3 years of work experience in one or more areas of the Six Sigma Green Belt Body of Knowledge (ASQ). Black Belt: 2 completed projects with signed affidavits OR 3 years of experience in the Six Sigma Black Belt Body of Knowledge (ASQ). IASSC has no experience requirements.
What Does It Cost?
Green Belt: $300 to $500 (exam only via ASQ) or $1,000 to $3,000 for training plus exam. Black Belt: $500 to $800 (exam only via ASQ) or $3,000 to $8,000 for training plus exam.
Exam Details
| Duration | Green Belt: 4 hours and 18 minutes. Black Belt: 4 hours and 18 minutes. |
| Questions | Green Belt: 110 questions. Black Belt: 150 questions. |
| Format | Computer-based or paper exam through ASQ. Open book allowed. IASSC exams are closed book. |
| Passing Score | Green Belt: 550 of 750 points. Black Belt: 550 of 750 points. |
What Is Six Sigma?
Six Sigma is a data-driven methodology for reducing defects and process variation, developed at Motorola in the 1980s and popularized by General Electric under Jack Welch in the 1990s. The name refers to a statistical concept: achieving a defect rate of no more than 3.4 defects per million opportunities, or six standard deviations from the mean. In practice, Six Sigma provides a structured framework for identifying process problems, analyzing root causes, and implementing improvements that stick.
The core methodology is DMAIC: Define (the problem and goals), Measure (current process performance), Analyze (root causes of defects), Improve (implement solutions), and Control (sustain the improvements over time). Most Six Sigma projects use statistical tools like control charts, regression analysis, and hypothesis testing to validate that improvements are real and durable.
Certification Levels
Six Sigma uses a belt system borrowed from martial arts. White Belt is an awareness-level introduction. Yellow Belt indicates foundational knowledge and the ability to support projects. Green Belt is the practitioner level: independently leading improvement projects within a functional area. Black Belt is the expert level: leading complex, cross-functional projects and mentoring Green Belts. Master Black Belt is the strategic level: designing the improvement program itself and coaching Black Belts across the organization.
Most professional career paths target Green Belt as the functional credential and Black Belt as the leadership credential. White and Yellow Belts are typically internal training programs rather than externally recognized certifications.
When Six Sigma Is Most Valuable
Six Sigma certification adds the most career value in manufacturing, healthcare quality, financial services operations, logistics, and any role where process variation directly affects cost, safety, or customer experience. In these environments, demonstrating the ability to lead structured improvement projects and work with data is a meaningful differentiator. In knowledge work environments like software development, the statistical rigor of Six Sigma is often replaced by Lean and Agile approaches, making it less relevant for day-to-day PM roles in those sectors.