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Project Management for Dummies
About this book
Now revised to stay in line with today's unique business challenges and project approaches, Project Management For Dummies, 2nd UK Portable Edition is updated with fresh content, tips, and tactics that cover everything you need to know from a project's start to finish. You'll find out how to make project planning both easier and more effective, manage resources to stay on track and within budget and utilise powerful risk management techniques to keep risks at a minimum during the project. Plus, clear descriptions of who should do what and plain-English explanations of the latest concepts behind best-practice project management techniques make it easy to stay focused and on target throughout the project's life cycle.
In today's time-pressured and cost-conscious global business environment, reliable project planning and competent delivery are more important than ever. Luckily, this approachable and on-the-go guide shows you what works and what doesn't, taking the guesswork out of project management and arming with the tools you need to succeed.
- Includes access to online templates and checklists
- Shows you how to avoid being part of the 70% project failure statistic
- Serves as the perfect portable reference to every aspect of project management
- Covers delivery-focused planning, team motivation techniques, and managing resources
Whether you're taking on a project for the first time or a more experienced project manager looking to catch up on the latest thinking and techniques in the field, this fun and accessible guide makes it easy.
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Information
Understanding Projects and What You Want to Achieve





Success in Project Management




Taking on a Project
Avoiding the Pitfalls
I went to the doctor and said âEvery time I do this, it hurts.â The doctor said, âWell, donât do it then.â
- Lack of clear objectives: Nobodyâs really sure what the project is about, much less are people agreed on it.
- Lack of risk management: Things go wrong that someone could easily have foreseen and then controlled to some degree or even prevented.
- No senior management âbuy inâ: Senior managers were never convinced and so never supported the project, leading to problems such as lack of resource. Neither did those managers exercise effective management supervision (good project governance) as they routinely do in their other areas of responsibility.
- Poor planning: Actually, thatâs being kind, because often the problem is that no planning was done at all. Itâs not surprising, then, when things run out of control because nobody knows where the project should be at this point anyway.
- No clear progress milestones: The lack of milestones means nobody sees when things are off track, and problems go unnoticed for a long time.
- Understated scope: The scope and the Project Plan are superficial and understate both what the project needs to deliver and the resource needed to deliver it. The additional work that is necessary then takes the project out of control, causing delay to the original schedule and overspending against the original budget.
- Poor communications: Many projects fail because of communication breakdown, which can stem from unclear roles and responsibilities and from poor senior management attitudes, such as not wanting to hear bad news.
- Unrealistic resource levels: It just isnât possible to do a project of the required scope with such a small amount of resource â staff, money or both.
- Unrealistic timescales: The project just canât deliver by the required time, so itâs doomed to failure.
- No change control: People add in things bit by bit â scope creep. Then it slowly dawns on everyone that the projectâs now grown so big that it canât be delivered within the fixed budget or by the set deadline.
Deciding whether Itâs a Project
- Is it a one-off job or something thatâs ongoing? If the job is ongoing, like taking customer orders, then itâs business as usual, not a project.
- Does the job justify project controls? Project management means incurring some overheads, but some jobs are so small or straightforward that they just donât justify that degree of control.
- This last one may sound a little weird, and it certainly doesnât fit with the formal definitions; itâs the question, âDo you want to handle the job as a project?â You may choose to deal with a block of work as a project, but I wouldnât â sometimes you have a choice.
Grasping the four control areas
- Scope: What the project will deliver
- Time: When the project will deliver
- Quality: So often forgotten, but an essential dimension
- Resource: Necessary amounts of staff time, funds and other resources such as equipment and accommodation that the project needs
The seeds of problems are laid down early. Initial planning is the most vital part of a project. The review of most failed pr...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I: Understanding Projects and What You Want to Achieve
- Part II: Building the Plans
- Part III: Putting Your Management Team Together
- Part IV: Steering the Project to Success
- Part V: The Part of Tens
- About the Authors
- Cheat Sheet
- Connect with Dummies
- End User License Agreement

