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BADM 318. Introduction to Project Management. What is Project Management?. “The application of knowledge , skills , tools , and techniques to project activities in order to meet or exceed shareholder needs and expectations from a project”
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BADM 318 Introduction to Project Management
What is Project Management? • “The application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities in order to meet or exceed shareholder needs and expectations from a project” – Project Management Institute (PMI)
What is Project Management? • “A method and a set of techniques based on the accepted principles of management used for planning, estimating, and controlling work activities to reach a desired end result on time, within budget, and according to specification.” - Weiss and Wysocki, 1992
What is Project Management? • “Maintaining cost, schedule and technical performance on a project.” - Santarossa, 2004
What is Project Management? • “A systematic, risk management approach to proactively guide projects to improve chances of success”
Increasingly adopted by other sectors such as video game industry…
1-5 It requires a unique blend of skills
Project junkie “A growing band of professional gypsies whose careers consist of a series of independent projects”
PMI Project Mgmt. Institute
PMI • More than 500,000 members • 170 counties • Most popular PM designation • Great for international work
West Coast B.C. Project Management Association • Established in 1979 • PMBOK written by B.C. member • 700 members
PM Careers in B.C. • Software development • Construction • Engineering • Environmental • Video game • Film
Project characteristics • An established objective • A defined life span with a beginning and an end • Usually the involvement of several departments or people • Typically, doing something that has never been done before (unique) • Specific time, cost and performance objectives Source: Gray, 2004)
4-1 Project Management Tradeoffs
Programs versus Projects • Program Defined • A series of coordinated, related, multiple projects that continue over an extended time and are intended to achieve a goal. • A higher-level group of projects targeted at a common goal. • Example: • Project: completion of a required course in project management. • Program: completion of all courses required for a business major.
Comparison of Routine Work with Projects Routine, Repetitive Work Taking class notes Daily entering sales receipts into the accounting ledger Responding to a supply-chain request Practicing scales on the piano Routine manufacture of an Apple iPod Attaching tags on a manufactured product Projects Writing a term paper Setting up a sales kiosk for a professional accounting meeting Developing a supply-chain information system Writing a new piano piece Designing an iPod that is approximately 2 X 4 inches, interfaces with PC, and stores 10,000 songs Wire-tag projects for GE and Wal-Mart TABLE 1.1
Integrated Management of Projects FIGURE 1.3
7-1 Risk Event Graph
Traditional Project Phases for a Construction Project