This is a collection of essays from key researchers in the field of project management who describe what they feel are the most impactful findings from research. In the challenging and competitive world of project management, project managers need all the insight they can get. Leading researchers share what they believe are the most important findings from the research being done today. These cover pressing topics confronting project managers, including hybrid methodologies, schedule overruns, schedule estimation, project efficiency, and managing local stakeholders. Highlights include the following:
Jeff Pinto and Kate Davis explore the “Normalization of Deviance” (NoD) phenomenon within various organizational settings, focusing on projects. NoD involves the gradual acceptance of deviant practices, diverging from established norms, and often leading to detrimental outcomes. Francesco Di Maddaloni investigates how local communities’ stakeholders are perceived, identified, and categorized by project managers in major public infrastructure and construction projects (MPIC). His chapter helps project managers to have a better understanding of a more inclusive and holistic approach to engage with a broader range of stakeholders. Lavagnon Ika, Peter Love, and Jeff Pinto suggest that error and bias combine to exact a toll on major projects, offer theoretical insights, and outline practical recommendations for project managers. Jonas Söderlund offers managerial guidelines for leveraging deadlines as powerful tools for generating project success. Pedro M. Serrador looks at empirical studies that link planning quality to project success, emphasizing its importance. He also discusses the downsides of excessive planning, particularly in dynamic environments and research and development projects.
Edited by:
Pedro Serrador
Imprint: Auerbach
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Weight: 349g
ISBN: 9781032472560
ISBN 10: 1032472561
Pages: 176
Publication Date: 21 August 2024
Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format: Paperback
Publisher's Status: Active
1. When Our Project Culture Fails Us: The Normalization of Deviance Trap 2. Balanced Leadership: Making Use of All Leadership Skills in the Project Team 3. Three Themes of Project Management 4. Before You Start Managing That Major Project, What You Should Know about Cost Overruns and Benefit Shortfalls 5. Why “Well-Padded” Projects Continue to Be Late 6. Are Agile Projects More Successful? 7. Managing Complex Projects 8. Managing the Benefits of Collaborative Projects 9. Agile, Traditional, and Hybrid Approaches to Project Success: Is Hybrid a Poor Second Choice? 10. Deadline.Dead-Line. Breathing Life into Projects 11. Our Love Affair with Project Slack (and Why It Ruins Our Schedule Accuracy) 12. How Principles Can Make Agile Benefits Realisation Successful 13. The Relationship Between Project Success and Project Efficiency 14. You’ve Just Inherited Someone Else’s Project: Now What? 15. Local Communities Stakeholder Defined. Identification and Categorization in Major Infrastructure Projects 16. What Planning Effort Optimizes Project Success? 17. Increasing Odds in Uncertain Times: Creating Value through Collaborative Learning
Pedro M. Serrador, MBA, PhD, P.Eng., PMP, ITIL, PMI-ACP is a writer and researcher on Agile, AI and management topics. He is an adjunct professor at the Northeastern University, Boston and University of Toronto, Canada. He is also the owner of Serrador Project Management, a consultancy in Toronto, Canada. He specializes in technically complex and high risk programs and projects, vendor management engagements, and tailoring and implementing project management methodologies; he has worked on projects in the financial, telecommunications, utility, medical imaging, and simulations sectors for some of the world’s largest companies. He is an author of books and articles on project management and is also a regular speaker at conferences. He was the recipient of the PMI 2012 James R. Snyder International Student Paper of the Year Award, the Major de Promotion Award for best PhD Thesis 2012-2013 from SKEMA business school and the 2022 Most cited paper of the year award from Project Management Journal. He holds a Hons. BSc in Physics and Computer Science from the University of Waterloo, Canada; an MBA from Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, Scotland; and a PhD in Strategy, Programme & Project Management from SKEMA Business School (Ecole Supérieure de Commerce de Lille, France).