Project Management JumpStart
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Project Management JumpStart

Kim Heldman

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eBook - ePub

Project Management JumpStart

Kim Heldman

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About This Book

The much-anticipated new edition of the popular project management introductory book

The role of the project manager continues to become more diverse and demanding, placing strong project management skills in high demand. This in-depth introductory guide offers aspiring project managers the essential fundamentals of project management. Fully revised since the previous version, this new edition includes updated project management methods and practices as well as new examples and study questions. Project management guru Kim Heldman presents you with a clear, concise, and enjoyable writing style so that you can approach project management from a practical?rather than theoretical?standpoint.

  • Serves as an introduction to the fundamentals of project management
  • Provides completely updated and revised material on project management methods and practices
  • Features new examples and study questions
  • Addresses how to create project schedules and budgets and define project goals
  • Covers project management principles, Project Management Institute?s project management standards, and practical application of project management for the workplace

Whether you're considering a career in project management or simply wish to expandyour understanding of general project management principles, Project Management JumpStart, Third Edition is ideal reading.

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Information

Publisher
Sybex
Year
2011
ISBN
9781118094471
Edition
3

Chapter 1
Building the Foundation

  • The definition of project management
  • Different organizational structures
  • The project management process groups
  • Project criteria
  • Constraints and their impacts
  • Project management certification
Welcome to the world of project management. Chances are you’ve already had some experience with project management, whether you’ve called it that or not. Maybe you’ve helped organize your company’s annual conference or been involved with a new product launch. At some point in your personal or professional life, you’ve probably used some sort of process to get from the beginning of the project to the end results.
You’ll discover through the course of this book that you may already use some of the processes we’ll talk about, but you may never have realized they were formalized procedures. I’ll add some new twists and tricks to those processes that you’ll want to try. You’ll also learn some new techniques and procedures that will enhance your project management experiences and help you run your next project smoothly and effortlessly. (OK, that might be stretching it a bit, but your project will run more efficiently.)
In this chapter, we’ll start building the foundation of good project management processes.

The Project Management Journey

Start your engines — we’re ready to lay the foundation for building and managing your project. In this chapter, we’ll start with a definition of a project, and then we’ll take a high-level look at some of the processes and plans you’ll build throughout the rest of the book and how you’ll benefit from using solid project management techniques when managing your next project. We’ll also cover organizational foundations before moving on to the project processes themselves. Here we go.
project management The process of applying knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to describe, organize, and monitor the work of the project in order to accomplish the goals of the project.

Is It a Project?

How do you know whether your new work assignment is a project or whether it’s going to benefit from project management techniques? If you’re like most of us, once you get to work and settle in for the day, you check your email and voice mail and touch base with some of the other folks on your team. The boss may drop by and ask for a status report on a problem you’ve been working on, gently nudging you to get back to it. All of these tasks are everyday work. They don’t really have a beginning or end; they’re ongoing. Projects are not everyday work. In order for work to be considered a project, it must meet a certain set of criteria.
Projects set out to produce a unique product or service that hasn’t been produced before. They have a limited timeframe and are temporary in nature. This means that projects have a definite beginning and ending. You can determine that a project is complete by comparing its end result or product to the objectives and deliverables stated in the project plan.
Everyday work is ongoing. Production processes are an example of ongoing operations. Maybe you love popping a handful of chocolate drops into your mouth mid-afternoon for a quick treat. Producing those chocolate drops is an example of ongoing operations. The production line knows how many candies to produce, what colors to coat them with, how many go in a package, and so on. Every day, hundreds of thousands of those little drops make their way into bags, onto the store shelves, and eventually into our mouths — yum. But the production of these candies is not a project.
Now let’s say that the management team has decided it’s time to introduce a new line of candy. You’ve been tasked with producing the new candy flavor and shape. You assemble a research team to come up with a new candy formula. The marketing team gathers some data, which shows that the new candy has real potential with the consumers. The candy is produced according to plan, monitored for adherence to the original formula and design, and shipped to the stores. Is this a project or ongoing operations?
The answer is, this is a project even though candy making is something the company does every day. The production of chocolate drops is considered an ongoing operation. The new candy, however, is a unique product because the company has never produced this flavor and shape of candy. Remember that projects are originated to bring about a product or service that hasn’t existed before. The new candy project was kicked off, carried out, monitored, and then ended when all the requirements were met. Candy production didn’t stop there, though. At the end of this project, the production of the candy was turned over to ongoing operations and absorbed into the everyday work of the company. The project ended in this case by being assimilated into the ongoing operations of the company. Table 1-1 recaps the characteristics of projects versus ongoing operations.
Table 1-1: Projects versus ongoing operations
Projects Ongoing operations
Definite beginning and end. No definitive beginning and end.
Temporary in nature. Ongoing.
Produces a unique product, service, or result. Produces the same product, service, or result over and over.
Resources are dedicated to the project. Resources are dedicated to operations.
Ending is determined by specific criteria. Processes are not completed.

Where Are We Going?

When you start out on a journey, it helps to have the destination in mind. We’ve embarked on a project management discovery journey, so I’d like to start by describing where we’ll be when we’ve finished.
customer The end user or recipient of the product, service, or result of the project. Customers may be internal or external to the organization.
The end of the project is the time to reflect on the processes used to complete the activities, to determine whether the customer is satisfied with the product the project set out to produce, and to document the lessons learned throughout the course of the project (among other things). You will be able to use this book to guide you from start to finish through your next small or medium-sized project so that you can easily assess those factors not only at the end of the project but as you progress through the project as well. (I consider large projects to be along the lines of building rocket ships, constructing major highways, or writing the latest, greatest software program that will automatically do your grocery shopping and monitor your golf swing all at the same time.) If you’re just starting out in project management, you probably aren’t heading...

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