Managing Projects In Organizations: How To Make The Best Use Of Time, Techniques, And People, Third Edition
商品資訊
ISBN13:9780787968311
出版社:John Wiley & Sons Inc
作者:Frame
出版日:2003/09/19
裝訂/頁數:精裝/288頁
商品簡介
作者簡介
名人/編輯推薦
目次
商品簡介
In this third edition of Managing Projects in Organizations, J. Davidson Frame updates and expands on his classic book to provide an accessible introduction to the field of project management. Drawing on more than twenty-five years of consulting and training experience, Frame's most current edition of his landmark book includes a wealth of new topics, including:
Managing virtual teams
The evolving concept of the project manager's role
Comanaged project teams
The project office
Project portfolios
Web-based project management
International project management
Managing virtual teams
The evolving concept of the project manager's role
Comanaged project teams
The project office
Project portfolios
Web-based project management
International project management
作者簡介
J. Davidson Frame is Dean of Academic Affairs at the University of Management and Technology (UMT) in Arlington, Virginia. Prior to joining UMT, he established the project management program at George Washington University. He also served as director of the Project Management Certification Program at the Project Management Institute (PMI) and has served on PMI's board of directors. Frame has authored more than forty articles and seven books, including The New Project Management (2nd edition) and Managing Risk in Organizations.
名人/編輯推薦
"Frame has a deep understanding of the systemic nature of project management."
— Quality Progress
"The New Project Management examines the new realities of project management: managing risk, maintaining quality of goods and services, outsourcing, satisfying customers, and communicating effectively with managers, customers, vendors, and staff."
— PM Network
"An excellent book I'd recommend is Managing Projects in Organizations by J. Davidson Frame. . . . can help you put your project management skills on track."— Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine
"Provides an excellent overview of the fundamental concepts of project management."
— Public Productivity Management Review
— Quality Progress
"The New Project Management examines the new realities of project management: managing risk, maintaining quality of goods and services, outsourcing, satisfying customers, and communicating effectively with managers, customers, vendors, and staff."
— PM Network
"An excellent book I'd recommend is Managing Projects in Organizations by J. Davidson Frame. . . . can help you put your project management skills on track."— Microsoft Certified Professional Magazine
"Provides an excellent overview of the fundamental concepts of project management."
— Public Productivity Management Review
目次
Preface.
The Author.
1. The New Business Environment and the Need for a New Project Management.
The New Business Environment.
The Problem with the Traditional Approach to Project Management.
The New Project Management.
Traits of the New Project Manager.
The Increased Value of Project Managers.
Conclusions.
PART ONE: MANAGING IN THE NEW BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT.
2. Managing Complexity: Techniques for Fashioning Order Out of Chaos.
Chaos and Complexity.
Facets of Complexity.
Experience with Project Complexity.
How to Manage Complexity.
Conclusions.
3. Engaging Change: Knowing When to Embrace, Accept, or Challenge.
Sources of Change.
Change Management Strategies.
Going with the Flow of Rapid Prototyping.
Resisting Change with Configuration Management.
Basic Steps in Developing a System with Configuration Management.
Change Control.
Conclusions.
4. Managing Risk: Identifying, Analyzing, and Planning Responses.
Perspectives on Risk.
Risk and Variability.
Range of Risks.
Sources of Risk on Projects.
Risk-Reward Trade-Offs.
Risk and Time Horizons.
Risk Exposure.
Risk Management.
Modeling.
Conclusions.
5. Satisfying Customers: Knowing Who They Are, What They Want, and When They are Right or Wrong.
Who Are Our Customers?
Meeting Customer Expectations.
Understanding Customers’ Needs and Requirements.
Traits of Effective Needs Analysts.
Steps for Improving Needs Definition.
Customers’ Responsibilities in Defining Their Needs.
Organizing to Achieve Customer Satisfaction.
What to Do When Customers Don’t Cooperate.
Conclusions.
6. Defining Requirements that Bridge the Customer-Developer Gap.
The Place of Needs and Requirements in the Project Management Process.
Capturing Requirements.
Key Players in the Requirements Definition and Management Process.
The Communication Challenge: I Can’t Read Your Mind.
The Standard Communication Model.
Tips for Handling Requirements.
Bringing It Together with Joint Application Development JAD) · Conclusion
PART TWO: TOOLS FOR THE NEW PROJECT MANAGEMENT.
7. Acquiring Political Skills and Building Influence.
What Is Politics?
Politics in Projects.
Players to Contend with in the Project Environment.
Being a Better Politician.
A Guide to Action.
Building Authority.
Using Authority Effectively.
Managing Our Managers.
Conclusions.
8. Building Teams with Borrowed Resources.
Make the Team as Tangible as Possible.
Develop Rewards for Good Behavior.
Develop an Effective Personal Touch.
Self-Managed Teams: Prospectus and Pitfalls.
Structuring the Team.
Conclusions.
9. Selecting Projects That Will Lead to Success.
The Essence of Choice.
Benefit-Cost Ratios.
Buss’s Technique for Rank Ordering Projects.
Poor Man’s Hierarchy.
The Murder Board.
Peer Review.
General Rules for Selecting Projects.
Conclusions.
10. Estimating Realistic Costs, Schedules, and Specifications to Ensure Project Success.
Causes of Poor Estimation.
The 10 Percent Optimist.
Traditional Approaches to Cost Estimating.
Bottom-Up Versus Top-Down Estimates.
Life Cycle Cost Estimating.
Strategies for Dealing with Poor Estimates.
Conclusions.
11. Scheduling Projects with New Tools: The Time-boxed and Critical Chain Scheduling Techniques.
Time-boxed Scheduling.
What Needs to be Prioritized?
Bringing Together Pertinent Players.
What Needs to Be Prioritized.
Techniques for Prioritization.
The Use of Parallel Development.
Scheduling Realities.
The Need for Discipline.
Critical Chain Scheduling.
The Critical Chain and the Theory of Constraints.
The Critical Chain Perspective and the Psychology of Estimating Task Durations.
Using Buffers Effectively to Accelerate Project Delivery.
Project Buffers, Feeder Buffers, and Resource Buffers.
Conclusions.
12. Outsourcing to Control Costs, Focus on Core Work, and Expand Resources.
Forms of Outsourcing.
Outsourcing in Project Management.
Contracting.
Contracting: Preaward.
Contracting: Postaward.
Customer Acceptance and the Handover.
Conclusions.
13. Integrating Cost and Schedule Control to Measure Work Performance.
A Graphical Approach to Integrated Cost/Schedule Control.
The Fifty-Fifty Rule for Measuring Work Performance.
Other Ways to Calculate Earned Value.
An New Look at Cost and Schedule Variance.
Developing a New Vocabulary.
Case Study: The Bora Bora Officers Club.
Collecting Data.
Trend Analysis with the Earned-Value Approach.
When Is the Earned-Value Approach Appropriate?
A Historical Note.
Conclusions.
14. Evaluating Projects to Maintain Goals, Strengthen Accountability, and Achieve Objectives.
What is Evaluation?
Evaluations and the Project Life Cycle.
Problems with Evaluation.
Inherent Characteristics of Evaluation.
The Structured Walk-through.
Conclusions.
15. Understanding and Using Performance Metrics; or, Measuring the Right Stuff.
The Role of Measurement in Managing Projects.
The Nature of Measurement.
Generating Measures.
The Shadow Side of Measures.
Conclusions.
16. Establishing and Maintaining a Project Support Office to Strengthen Project Management Capabilities.
Traditional Project/Program Offices.
What Project Support Offices Do.
Where Should the Project Support Office Reside? · Staffing the Project Support Office.
Selling the Project Support Office.
17. Carpe Diem: Seize the Day!
Appendix: An Annotated Reading List for the New Project Management.
References.
Index.
The Author.
1. The New Business Environment and the Need for a New Project Management.
The New Business Environment.
The Problem with the Traditional Approach to Project Management.
The New Project Management.
Traits of the New Project Manager.
The Increased Value of Project Managers.
Conclusions.
PART ONE: MANAGING IN THE NEW BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT.
2. Managing Complexity: Techniques for Fashioning Order Out of Chaos.
Chaos and Complexity.
Facets of Complexity.
Experience with Project Complexity.
How to Manage Complexity.
Conclusions.
3. Engaging Change: Knowing When to Embrace, Accept, or Challenge.
Sources of Change.
Change Management Strategies.
Going with the Flow of Rapid Prototyping.
Resisting Change with Configuration Management.
Basic Steps in Developing a System with Configuration Management.
Change Control.
Conclusions.
4. Managing Risk: Identifying, Analyzing, and Planning Responses.
Perspectives on Risk.
Risk and Variability.
Range of Risks.
Sources of Risk on Projects.
Risk-Reward Trade-Offs.
Risk and Time Horizons.
Risk Exposure.
Risk Management.
Modeling.
Conclusions.
5. Satisfying Customers: Knowing Who They Are, What They Want, and When They are Right or Wrong.
Who Are Our Customers?
Meeting Customer Expectations.
Understanding Customers’ Needs and Requirements.
Traits of Effective Needs Analysts.
Steps for Improving Needs Definition.
Customers’ Responsibilities in Defining Their Needs.
Organizing to Achieve Customer Satisfaction.
What to Do When Customers Don’t Cooperate.
Conclusions.
6. Defining Requirements that Bridge the Customer-Developer Gap.
The Place of Needs and Requirements in the Project Management Process.
Capturing Requirements.
Key Players in the Requirements Definition and Management Process.
The Communication Challenge: I Can’t Read Your Mind.
The Standard Communication Model.
Tips for Handling Requirements.
Bringing It Together with Joint Application Development JAD) · Conclusion
PART TWO: TOOLS FOR THE NEW PROJECT MANAGEMENT.
7. Acquiring Political Skills and Building Influence.
What Is Politics?
Politics in Projects.
Players to Contend with in the Project Environment.
Being a Better Politician.
A Guide to Action.
Building Authority.
Using Authority Effectively.
Managing Our Managers.
Conclusions.
8. Building Teams with Borrowed Resources.
Make the Team as Tangible as Possible.
Develop Rewards for Good Behavior.
Develop an Effective Personal Touch.
Self-Managed Teams: Prospectus and Pitfalls.
Structuring the Team.
Conclusions.
9. Selecting Projects That Will Lead to Success.
The Essence of Choice.
Benefit-Cost Ratios.
Buss’s Technique for Rank Ordering Projects.
Poor Man’s Hierarchy.
The Murder Board.
Peer Review.
General Rules for Selecting Projects.
Conclusions.
10. Estimating Realistic Costs, Schedules, and Specifications to Ensure Project Success.
Causes of Poor Estimation.
The 10 Percent Optimist.
Traditional Approaches to Cost Estimating.
Bottom-Up Versus Top-Down Estimates.
Life Cycle Cost Estimating.
Strategies for Dealing with Poor Estimates.
Conclusions.
11. Scheduling Projects with New Tools: The Time-boxed and Critical Chain Scheduling Techniques.
Time-boxed Scheduling.
What Needs to be Prioritized?
Bringing Together Pertinent Players.
What Needs to Be Prioritized.
Techniques for Prioritization.
The Use of Parallel Development.
Scheduling Realities.
The Need for Discipline.
Critical Chain Scheduling.
The Critical Chain and the Theory of Constraints.
The Critical Chain Perspective and the Psychology of Estimating Task Durations.
Using Buffers Effectively to Accelerate Project Delivery.
Project Buffers, Feeder Buffers, and Resource Buffers.
Conclusions.
12. Outsourcing to Control Costs, Focus on Core Work, and Expand Resources.
Forms of Outsourcing.
Outsourcing in Project Management.
Contracting.
Contracting: Preaward.
Contracting: Postaward.
Customer Acceptance and the Handover.
Conclusions.
13. Integrating Cost and Schedule Control to Measure Work Performance.
A Graphical Approach to Integrated Cost/Schedule Control.
The Fifty-Fifty Rule for Measuring Work Performance.
Other Ways to Calculate Earned Value.
An New Look at Cost and Schedule Variance.
Developing a New Vocabulary.
Case Study: The Bora Bora Officers Club.
Collecting Data.
Trend Analysis with the Earned-Value Approach.
When Is the Earned-Value Approach Appropriate?
A Historical Note.
Conclusions.
14. Evaluating Projects to Maintain Goals, Strengthen Accountability, and Achieve Objectives.
What is Evaluation?
Evaluations and the Project Life Cycle.
Problems with Evaluation.
Inherent Characteristics of Evaluation.
The Structured Walk-through.
Conclusions.
15. Understanding and Using Performance Metrics; or, Measuring the Right Stuff.
The Role of Measurement in Managing Projects.
The Nature of Measurement.
Generating Measures.
The Shadow Side of Measures.
Conclusions.
16. Establishing and Maintaining a Project Support Office to Strengthen Project Management Capabilities.
Traditional Project/Program Offices.
What Project Support Offices Do.
Where Should the Project Support Office Reside? · Staffing the Project Support Office.
Selling the Project Support Office.
17. Carpe Diem: Seize the Day!
Appendix: An Annotated Reading List for the New Project Management.
References.
Index.
主題書展
更多
主題書展
更多書展購物須知
外文書商品之書封,為出版社提供之樣本。實際出貨商品,以出版社所提供之現有版本為主。部份書籍,因出版社供應狀況特殊,匯率將依實際狀況做調整。
無庫存之商品,在您完成訂單程序之後,將以空運的方式為你下單調貨。為了縮短等待的時間,建議您將外文書與其他商品分開下單,以獲得最快的取貨速度,平均調貨時間為1~2個月。
為了保護您的權益,「三民網路書店」提供會員七日商品鑑賞期(收到商品為起始日)。
若要辦理退貨,請在商品鑑賞期內寄回,且商品必須是全新狀態與完整包裝(商品、附件、發票、隨貨贈品等)否則恕不接受退貨。

