Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

1 Projects in Contemporary Organizations 1

1.1 The Definition of a “Project” 2

1.2 Why Project Management? 9

1.3 The Project Life Cycle 16

1.4 Agile Project Management 21

1.5 The Structure of this Text 26

Project Management In Practice

A Unique Method for Traveler-Tracking at Copenhagen Airport 5

The Smart-Grid Revolution Starts in Boulder, Colorado 7

The Olympic Torch Relay Project 8

Turning London’s Waste Dump into the 2012 Olympics Stadium 19

Part I: Project Initiation

2 Project Strategy and Selection 37

2.1 Organizational Project Management and Governance 38

2.2 Project Selection Models 43

2.3 Project Portfolio Management (PPM) 57

Project Management In Practice

Beagle 2 Mars Probe—A Planning Failure 38

Taipei 101: Refitted as World’s Tallest Sustainable Building 47

Using a Project Portfolio to Achieve 100 Percent On-Time Delivery at Decor Cabinet Company 59

Implementing Strategy through Projects at Blue Cross/Blue Shield 61

Case: MDCM, Inc. (B): Strategic IT Portfolio Management 72

Reading: From Experience: Linking Projects to Strategy 74

3 The Project Manager 83

3.1 Project Management and the Project Manager 84

3.2 Special Demands on the Project Manager 90

3.3 Attributes of Effective Project Managers 98

3.4 Problems of Cultural Differences 105

Project Management In Practice

The Project Management Career Path at AT&T 89

Shanghai Unlucky with Passengers 96

Growing Stress at Twitter 104

Success at Energo by Integrating Two Diverse Cultures 108

Cases: Two Emergency Projects and PMs 114

Reading: Juggling Act 117

Chapter 3 Appendix: Primer on Effective TimeManagement (Online)

4 Managing for Stakeholders and Resolving Conflicts 119

4.1 Identifying and Analyzing Stakeholders 121

4.2 Conflicts and the Project Life Cycle 124

4.3 Dealing with Conflicts 128

4.4 The Nature of Negotiation 130

4.5 Partnering, Chartering, and Scope Change 133

Project Management In Practice

Agile Project to Create Website Following Earthquake 121

Stakeholder Involvement at Nemours Children’s Hospital 124

A Consensus Feasibility Study for Montreal’s Archipel Dam 129

Quickly Building a Kindergarten through Negotiation 132

Case 4.1: Winds of Change in Klickitat County: The Harvest Wind Project 139

Case 4.2: Negotiation in Action—The Quad Sensor Project 145

Reading: Roll Call 146

5 The Project in the Organizational Structure 148

5.1 Projects in a Functional Organization 150

5.2 Projects in a Projectized Organization 153

5.3 Projects in a Matrixed Organization 155

5.4 Projects in Composite Organizational Structures 161

5.5 Selecting a Project Form 162

5.6 The Project Management Office 163

5.7 The Project Team 172

5.8 Human Factors and the Project Team 177

Project Management In Practice

Reorganizing for Project Management at Prevost Car 153

Software Firm Yunio Avoids Complex Technologies 160

Trinatronic, Inc. 164

A Project Management Office Success for the Transportation Security Administration 167

Convention Security: Project Success through Budget Recovery 169

South African Repair Success through Teamwork 178

Case: Acorn Industries 185

Reading: Four Steps to a Stronger PMO 188

Part II: Project Planning

6 Activity Planning: Traditional and Agile 193

6.1 Traditional Project Activity Planning 195

6.2 Agile Project Planning 213

6.3 Coordination through Integration Management 221

Project Management In Practice

Child Support Software a Victim of Scope Creep 200

Using Agile to Integrate Two Gas Pipeline Systems 215

The Current State of Agile Project Management 216

An Acquisition Failure Questions Recommended Practice 222

Case: Heublein: Planning a Project Management and Control System 228

Reading: The Evolution of Agile 236

7 Budgeting and Risk Management 239

7.1 Estimating Project Budgets 240

7.2 Better Cost Estimating and Bidding 251

7.3 Project Risk Management 261

7.4 Quantitative Risk Assessment Methodologies 271

Project Management In Practice

Pathfinder Mission to Mars—on a Shoestring 241

The Emanon Aircraft Corporation 260

Facebook Risks Interruption to Move a Terabyte 270

Ignoring Risk Contrasted with Recognizing Risk in Two Industries 274

Simulating the Failure of California’s Levees 275

Case: Fuddruckers and the Crystal Coast Music Festival 291

Reading: Building Resiliency 294

8 Scheduling 297

8.1 Background 297

8.2 Network Techniques: PERT and CPM 299

8.3 Risk Analysis Using Simulation with Crystal Ball® 328

8.4 Using these Tools 338

8.5 Scheduling with Scrum 339

Project Management In Practice

Massachusetts’ Instant Bridges 298

Election Returns within Three Hours 306

Hosting the Annual Project Management Institute Symposium 326

Designing and Delivering a Rush Vehicle for War 337

Case: NutriStar Energy, Inc. 351

Reading: Without Further Delay 353

9 Resource Allocation 356

9.1 Critical Path Method—Crashing a Project 357

9.2 The Resource Allocation Problem 364

9.3 Resource Loading 366

9.4 Resource Leveling 370

9.5 Constrained Resource Scheduling 374

9.6 Goldratt’s Critical Chain 380

Project Management In Practice

Expediting Los Angeles Freeway Repairs after the Earthquake 357

Thirty Days to Rescue 365

Benefits of Resource Constraining at Pennsylvania Electric 379

Architectural Associates, Inc. 386

Case: D. U. Singer Hospital Products Corp. 392

Reading: Let the Games Begin—Now 395

Part III: Project Execution

10 Monitoring and Information Systems 399

10.1 The Planning–Monitoring–Controlling Cycle 400

10.2 Information Needs and Reporting 404

10.3 Earned Value Analysis 409

10.4 Agile Tools for Tracking Project Progress 421

Project Management In Practice

Using Project Management Software to Schedule the Olympic Games 401

Managing Costs at Massachusetts’ Neighborhood Health Plan 405

Using Earned Value to Monitor Governmental Archiving and Records Costs 415

Success through Earned Value at Texas Instruments 420

Case: The Project Manager/Customer Interface 428

Reading: Raise the Red Flags 431

11 Project Control 433

11.1 The Fundamental Purposes of Control 436

11.2 Three Types of Control Processes 438

11.3 The Design of Control Systems 448

11.4 Control of Change and Scope Creep 455

Project Management In Practice

Major Scope Creep in Boston’s “Big Dig” 436

Extensive Controls for San Francisco’s Metro Turnback Project 439

Tracking Scope Creep: A Project Manager Responds 451

Better Control of Development Projects at Johnson Controls 457

Case: The Project Manager/Customer Interface (B) 464

Reading: Delivery Dilemma: Here’s How to Choose the Right Approach for a Project 465

12 Project Auditing 468

12.1 Purposes of Evaluation—Goals of the System 469

12.2 The Project Audit 472

12.3 The Project Audit Life Cycle 479

12.4 Some Essentials of an Audit/Evaluation 483

12.5 Measurement 485

Project Management In Practice 470

Risk Analysis vs. Budget/Schedule Requirements in Australia 470

Lessons from Auditing 110 Client/Server and Open Systems Projects 473

Regaining Control of Nuclear Fusion 475

Auditing a Troubled Project at Atlantic States Chemical Laboratories 480

Case: Theater High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD): Five Failures and Counting (B) 490

Reading: An Assessment of Postproject Reviews 493

13 Project Closure and Benefits Realization 499

13.1 The Varieties of Project Closure 500

13.2 When to Close a Project 503

13.3 The Closure Process 508

13.4 The Project Plan Report—A Project History 515

13.5 Benefits Realization 517

13.6 Afterword 518

Project Management In Practice

Nucor’s Approach to Closure by Addition 502

Twelve Hospital Handoff Projects 504

Terminating the Superconducting Super Collider Project 509

When You Have to Kill a Project 515

Author Index I-1

Subject Index I-3

Please visit http://www.wiley.com/college/meredith for Appendices.

Appendix A Probability and Statistics (Online)

Appendix B Solutions to Selected Problems (Online)

Appendix C Technological Forecasting (Online)

Appendix D Creativity and Idea Generation (Online)

Project Management

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    A Paperback / softback by Jack R. Meredith, Scott M. Shafer, Samuel J. Mantel, Jr.

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      View other formats and editions of Project Management by Jack R. Meredith

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 18/11/2021
      ISBN13: 9781119803836, 978-1119803836
      ISBN10: 1119803837

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      1 Projects in Contemporary Organizations 1

      1.1 The Definition of a “Project” 2

      1.2 Why Project Management? 9

      1.3 The Project Life Cycle 16

      1.4 Agile Project Management 21

      1.5 The Structure of this Text 26

      Project Management In Practice

      A Unique Method for Traveler-Tracking at Copenhagen Airport 5

      The Smart-Grid Revolution Starts in Boulder, Colorado 7

      The Olympic Torch Relay Project 8

      Turning London’s Waste Dump into the 2012 Olympics Stadium 19

      Part I: Project Initiation

      2 Project Strategy and Selection 37

      2.1 Organizational Project Management and Governance 38

      2.2 Project Selection Models 43

      2.3 Project Portfolio Management (PPM) 57

      Project Management In Practice

      Beagle 2 Mars Probe—A Planning Failure 38

      Taipei 101: Refitted as World’s Tallest Sustainable Building 47

      Using a Project Portfolio to Achieve 100 Percent On-Time Delivery at Decor Cabinet Company 59

      Implementing Strategy through Projects at Blue Cross/Blue Shield 61

      Case: MDCM, Inc. (B): Strategic IT Portfolio Management 72

      Reading: From Experience: Linking Projects to Strategy 74

      3 The Project Manager 83

      3.1 Project Management and the Project Manager 84

      3.2 Special Demands on the Project Manager 90

      3.3 Attributes of Effective Project Managers 98

      3.4 Problems of Cultural Differences 105

      Project Management In Practice

      The Project Management Career Path at AT&T 89

      Shanghai Unlucky with Passengers 96

      Growing Stress at Twitter 104

      Success at Energo by Integrating Two Diverse Cultures 108

      Cases: Two Emergency Projects and PMs 114

      Reading: Juggling Act 117

      Chapter 3 Appendix: Primer on Effective TimeManagement (Online)

      4 Managing for Stakeholders and Resolving Conflicts 119

      4.1 Identifying and Analyzing Stakeholders 121

      4.2 Conflicts and the Project Life Cycle 124

      4.3 Dealing with Conflicts 128

      4.4 The Nature of Negotiation 130

      4.5 Partnering, Chartering, and Scope Change 133

      Project Management In Practice

      Agile Project to Create Website Following Earthquake 121

      Stakeholder Involvement at Nemours Children’s Hospital 124

      A Consensus Feasibility Study for Montreal’s Archipel Dam 129

      Quickly Building a Kindergarten through Negotiation 132

      Case 4.1: Winds of Change in Klickitat County: The Harvest Wind Project 139

      Case 4.2: Negotiation in Action—The Quad Sensor Project 145

      Reading: Roll Call 146

      5 The Project in the Organizational Structure 148

      5.1 Projects in a Functional Organization 150

      5.2 Projects in a Projectized Organization 153

      5.3 Projects in a Matrixed Organization 155

      5.4 Projects in Composite Organizational Structures 161

      5.5 Selecting a Project Form 162

      5.6 The Project Management Office 163

      5.7 The Project Team 172

      5.8 Human Factors and the Project Team 177

      Project Management In Practice

      Reorganizing for Project Management at Prevost Car 153

      Software Firm Yunio Avoids Complex Technologies 160

      Trinatronic, Inc. 164

      A Project Management Office Success for the Transportation Security Administration 167

      Convention Security: Project Success through Budget Recovery 169

      South African Repair Success through Teamwork 178

      Case: Acorn Industries 185

      Reading: Four Steps to a Stronger PMO 188

      Part II: Project Planning

      6 Activity Planning: Traditional and Agile 193

      6.1 Traditional Project Activity Planning 195

      6.2 Agile Project Planning 213

      6.3 Coordination through Integration Management 221

      Project Management In Practice

      Child Support Software a Victim of Scope Creep 200

      Using Agile to Integrate Two Gas Pipeline Systems 215

      The Current State of Agile Project Management 216

      An Acquisition Failure Questions Recommended Practice 222

      Case: Heublein: Planning a Project Management and Control System 228

      Reading: The Evolution of Agile 236

      7 Budgeting and Risk Management 239

      7.1 Estimating Project Budgets 240

      7.2 Better Cost Estimating and Bidding 251

      7.3 Project Risk Management 261

      7.4 Quantitative Risk Assessment Methodologies 271

      Project Management In Practice

      Pathfinder Mission to Mars—on a Shoestring 241

      The Emanon Aircraft Corporation 260

      Facebook Risks Interruption to Move a Terabyte 270

      Ignoring Risk Contrasted with Recognizing Risk in Two Industries 274

      Simulating the Failure of California’s Levees 275

      Case: Fuddruckers and the Crystal Coast Music Festival 291

      Reading: Building Resiliency 294

      8 Scheduling 297

      8.1 Background 297

      8.2 Network Techniques: PERT and CPM 299

      8.3 Risk Analysis Using Simulation with Crystal Ball® 328

      8.4 Using these Tools 338

      8.5 Scheduling with Scrum 339

      Project Management In Practice

      Massachusetts’ Instant Bridges 298

      Election Returns within Three Hours 306

      Hosting the Annual Project Management Institute Symposium 326

      Designing and Delivering a Rush Vehicle for War 337

      Case: NutriStar Energy, Inc. 351

      Reading: Without Further Delay 353

      9 Resource Allocation 356

      9.1 Critical Path Method—Crashing a Project 357

      9.2 The Resource Allocation Problem 364

      9.3 Resource Loading 366

      9.4 Resource Leveling 370

      9.5 Constrained Resource Scheduling 374

      9.6 Goldratt’s Critical Chain 380

      Project Management In Practice

      Expediting Los Angeles Freeway Repairs after the Earthquake 357

      Thirty Days to Rescue 365

      Benefits of Resource Constraining at Pennsylvania Electric 379

      Architectural Associates, Inc. 386

      Case: D. U. Singer Hospital Products Corp. 392

      Reading: Let the Games Begin—Now 395

      Part III: Project Execution

      10 Monitoring and Information Systems 399

      10.1 The Planning–Monitoring–Controlling Cycle 400

      10.2 Information Needs and Reporting 404

      10.3 Earned Value Analysis 409

      10.4 Agile Tools for Tracking Project Progress 421

      Project Management In Practice

      Using Project Management Software to Schedule the Olympic Games 401

      Managing Costs at Massachusetts’ Neighborhood Health Plan 405

      Using Earned Value to Monitor Governmental Archiving and Records Costs 415

      Success through Earned Value at Texas Instruments 420

      Case: The Project Manager/Customer Interface 428

      Reading: Raise the Red Flags 431

      11 Project Control 433

      11.1 The Fundamental Purposes of Control 436

      11.2 Three Types of Control Processes 438

      11.3 The Design of Control Systems 448

      11.4 Control of Change and Scope Creep 455

      Project Management In Practice

      Major Scope Creep in Boston’s “Big Dig” 436

      Extensive Controls for San Francisco’s Metro Turnback Project 439

      Tracking Scope Creep: A Project Manager Responds 451

      Better Control of Development Projects at Johnson Controls 457

      Case: The Project Manager/Customer Interface (B) 464

      Reading: Delivery Dilemma: Here’s How to Choose the Right Approach for a Project 465

      12 Project Auditing 468

      12.1 Purposes of Evaluation—Goals of the System 469

      12.2 The Project Audit 472

      12.3 The Project Audit Life Cycle 479

      12.4 Some Essentials of an Audit/Evaluation 483

      12.5 Measurement 485

      Project Management In Practice 470

      Risk Analysis vs. Budget/Schedule Requirements in Australia 470

      Lessons from Auditing 110 Client/Server and Open Systems Projects 473

      Regaining Control of Nuclear Fusion 475

      Auditing a Troubled Project at Atlantic States Chemical Laboratories 480

      Case: Theater High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD): Five Failures and Counting (B) 490

      Reading: An Assessment of Postproject Reviews 493

      13 Project Closure and Benefits Realization 499

      13.1 The Varieties of Project Closure 500

      13.2 When to Close a Project 503

      13.3 The Closure Process 508

      13.4 The Project Plan Report—A Project History 515

      13.5 Benefits Realization 517

      13.6 Afterword 518

      Project Management In Practice

      Nucor’s Approach to Closure by Addition 502

      Twelve Hospital Handoff Projects 504

      Terminating the Superconducting Super Collider Project 509

      When You Have to Kill a Project 515

      Author Index I-1

      Subject Index I-3

      Please visit http://www.wiley.com/college/meredith for Appendices.

      Appendix A Probability and Statistics (Online)

      Appendix B Solutions to Selected Problems (Online)

      Appendix C Technological Forecasting (Online)

      Appendix D Creativity and Idea Generation (Online)

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