project management introduction

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Copyright 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Chapter 1 Projects in Contemporary Organizations

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Project Management

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Page 1: Project Management Introduction

Copyright 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Chapter 1

Projects in Contemporary Organizations

Page 2: Project Management Introduction

Introduction

Much of project management developed by the military

– Navy’s Polaris program– NASA’s space program– Strategic defense initiative

Project management has found wide acceptance in industry

It has many applications outside of construction– Managing legal cases– Managing new product releases

Page 3: Project Management Introduction

Introduction Continued

Main forces in driving the acceptance of project and other forms of management:

1. The exponential growth of human knowledge2. The growing demand for a broad range of

complex goods and services3. Increased worldwide competition

All of these contribute to the need for organizations to do more and to do it faster

Project management is one way to do more faster

Page 4: Project Management Introduction

Projects Tend to be Large

Projects tend to be large– The Channel Tunnel, or Chunnel– Denver International Airport– Panama Canal expansion project– Three Gorges Dam, China

Projects are getting larger over time– Flying: balloons planes jets rockets

reusable rockets

Page 5: Project Management Introduction

Main Goals of Project Management

1. Time2. Cost3. Performance

Time, cost, and performance are all related on a project

Page 6: Project Management Introduction

Direct Project Goals: Performance, Cost, Time

Figure 1-1

Page 7: Project Management Introduction

Project Management Institute (PMI)

The Project Management Institute is the major project management organization

Founded in 1969 Grew from 7,500 members in 1990 to over

260,000 in 2007 The Project Management Journal and PM

Network are the leading project management journals

Page 8: Project Management Introduction

Project Manager

Project manager is the key individual on a project

Project manager is like a mini-CEOWhile project manager always has

responsibility, may not have necessary authority

Page 9: Project Management Introduction

The Definition of a “Project”

A ‘Project’ is a temporary endeavour, having a defined beginning and end (usually constrained by date, but can be by funding or deliverables).

E.g.- hospital, freeways, new website, movie, insurance policy etc.

Page 10: Project Management Introduction

Major Characteristics of a Project

Importance Performance Life cycle with a finite due date Interdependencies Uniqueness Resources Conflict

Page 11: Project Management Introduction

Why Project Management?

The main purpose for initiating a project is to accomplish some goal

Project management increases the likelihood of accomplishing that goal

Project management gives us someone (the project manager) to spearhead the project and to hold accountable for its completion

Page 12: Project Management Introduction

Negative Side to Project Management

Greater organizational complexityHigher probability organizational policy

will be violatedSays managers cannot accomplish the

desired outcomeConflict

Page 13: Project Management Introduction

The Project Life Cycle

Figure 1-3

Page 14: Project Management Introduction

Time Distribution of Project Effort

Figure 1-4

Page 15: Project Management Introduction

Another Possible Project Life Cycle

Figure 1-5

Page 16: Project Management Introduction

Risk During at the Start of the Life Cycle

Figure 1-6

Page 17: Project Management Introduction

Risk During the Life Cycle

Figure 1-7

Page 18: Project Management Introduction

The Structure of this Course

Follows the project life cycleSome topics stand-aloneOther topics incorporated throughoutExercisesCase-studiesTutorials

Page 19: Project Management Introduction

Part I: Project Initiation

1. Projects in Contemporary Organizations

2. Strategic Management and Project Selection

3. The Project Manager

4. Negotiation and the Management of Conflict

5. The Project in the Organizational Structure

Page 20: Project Management Introduction

Part II: Project Planning

6. Project Activity Planning

7. Budgeting and Cost Estimation

8. Scheduling

9. Resource Allocation

Page 21: Project Management Introduction

Part III: Project Execution

10. Monitoring and Information Systems

11. Project Control

12. Project Auditing

13. Project Termination