Modern Project management began in the early 1960s, although it
has its roots much further back in the latter years of the 19th
century. The need for project management was driven by businesses
that realised the benefits of organising work around projects and
the critical need to communicate and co-ordinate work across
departments and professions. One of the first major uses of project
management as we know it today was to manage the United States space
programme. The government, military and corporate world have now
adopted this practice. Here is the main definition of what project
management is:
Project management is no small task.
Project management has a definite beginning and end. It is not
a continuous process.
Project management uses various tools to measure
accomplishments and track project tasks. These include Work
Breakdown Structures, Gantt charts and PERT charts.
Projects frequently need resources on an ad-hoc basis as
opposed to organisations that have only dedicated full-time
positions.
Project management reduces risk and increases the chance of
success.
Project management is often summarised in a triangle. The three
most important factors are time, cost and scope, commonly called the
triple constraint. These form the vertices with quality as a central
theme.
Projects must be delivered on time.
Projects must be within cost.
Projects must be within scope.
Projects must meet customer quality requirements.
More recently, this has given way to a project management
diamond, with time, cost, scope and quality the four vertices and
customer expectations as a central theme. No two customers'
expectations are the same so you must ask what their expectations
are.
A project goes through six phases during its life:
Project Definition: Defining the goals, objectives and
critical success factors for the project.
Project Initiation: Everything that is needed to set-up the
project before work can start.
Project Planning: Detailed plans of how the work will be
carried out including time, cost and resource estimates.
Project Execution: Doing the work to deliver the product,
service or desired outcome.
Project Control: Ensuring that a project stays on track and
taking corrective action to ensure it does.
Project Closure: Formal acceptance of the deliverables and
disbanding of all the elements that were required to run the
project.
The role of the project manager is one of great responsibility.
It is the project manager's job to direct, supervise and control the
project from beginning to end. Project managers should not carryout
project work, managing the project is enough. Here are some of the
activities that must be undertaken:
The project manager must define the project, reduce it to a
set of manageable tasks, obtain appropriate resources and build a
team to perform the work.
The project manager must set the final goal for the project
and motivate his/her team to complete the project on time.
The project manager must inform all stakeholders of progress
on a regular basis.
The project manager must assess and monitor risks to the
project and mitigate them.
No project ever goes exactly as planned, so project managers
must learn to adapt to and manage change.
A project manager must have a range of skills including:
Leadership
People management (customers, suppliers, functional managers
and project team)
Effective Communication (verbal and written)
Influencing
Negotiation
Conflict Management
Planning
Contract management
Estimating
Problem solving
Creative thinking
Time Management
"Project managers bear ultimate responsibility for making things
happen. Traditionally, they have carried out this role as mere
implementers. To do their jobs they needed to have basic
administrative and technical competencies. Today they play a far
broader role. In addition to the traditional skills, they need to
have business skills, customer relations skills, and political
skills. Psychologically, they must be results-oriented self-starters
with a high tolerance for ambiguity, because little is clear-cut in
today's tumultuous business environment. Shortcomings in any of
these areas can lead to project failure." - J. Davidson Frame
Many things can go wrong in project management. These things are
often called barriers. Here are some possible barriers:
Poor communication
Disagreement
Misunderstandings
Bad weather
Union strikes
Personality conflicts
Poor management
Poorly defined goals and objectives
A good project management discipline will not eliminate all
risks, issues and surprises, but will provide standard processes and
procedures to deal with them and help prevent the following:
Projects finishing late, exceeding budget or not meeting
customer expectations.
Inconsistency between the processes and procedures used by
projects managers, leading to some being favoured more than
others.
Successful projects, despite a lack of planning, achieved
through high stress levels, goodwill and significant amounts of
overtime.
Project management seen as not adding value and as a waste of
time and money.
Unforeseen internal and/or external events impacting the
project.
Project management is about creating an environment and
conditions in which a defined goal or objective can be achieved in a
controlled manner by a team of people.