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Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 1 Project Management in Practice Prepared by Scott M. Shafer Wake Forest University Mantel, Meredith,

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 1 Project Management in Practice Prepared by Scott M. Shafer Wake Forest University Mantel, Meredith,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 1 Project Management in Practice Prepared by Scott M. Shafer Wake Forest University Mantel, Meredith, Shafer, and Sutton John Wiley and Sons, Inc.

2 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 2 Chapter 2 The Manager, the Organization, and the Team

3 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 3 THE PM’S ROLES

4 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 4 Facilitator 4 Manager-As-Supervisor Versus Manager- As-Facilitator 4 Systems Approach Versus Analytical Approach –suboptimization 4 Must ensure project team members have appropriate knowledge and resources 4 Micromanagement

5 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 5 Communicator Figure 2-1 Communication Paths Between a Project’s Parties-At-Interest

6 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 6 Virtual Project Manager 4 Geographically Dispersed Projects 4 Communication Via –email –Web –telephone –video conferencing 4 “Never let the boss be surprised!”

7 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 7 THE PM’S RESPONSIBILITIES TO THE PROJECT

8 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 8 Three Overriding Responsibilities 4 Acquisition of Resources –getting necessary quantity and quality can be key challenge –“irrational optimism” 4 Fighting Fires and Obstacles 4 Leadership and Making Trade-Offs

9 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 9 Negotiation, Conflict Resolution, and Persuasion 4 Necessary to meet three overriding responsibilities

10 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 10 SELECTION OF A PROJECT MANAGER

11 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 11 Key Criteria 4 Credibility - The PM is believable –technical credibility –administrative credibility 4 Sensitivity - Politically Astute and Aware of Interpersonal Conflict 4 Leadership, Style, Ethics - Ability to Direct Project in Ethical Manner

12 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 12 PROJECT MANAGEMENT AS A PROFESSION

13 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 13 Project Management as a Profession 4 Project Management Institute –64,000 members 4 Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK) 4 Project-Oriented Organization

14 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 14 FITTING PROJECTS IN THE PARENT ORGANIZATION

15 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 15 More on “Why Projects?” 4 Emphasis on Time-to-Market 4 Need for Specialized Knowledge from a Variety of Areas 4 Explosive Rate of Technological Change 4 Accountability and Control

16 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 16 Figure 2-2 The Pure Project Organization

17 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 17 The Pure Project Organization 4 Advantages –Effective and efficient for large projects –Resources available as needed –Broad range of specialists –short lines of communication 4 Drawbacks –Expensive for small projects –Specialists may have limited technological depth –May require high levels of duplication for certain specialties

18 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 18 Figure 2-3 Functional Project Organization

19 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 19 Functional Project Organization 4 Advantages –technological depth 4 Drawbacks –lines of communication outside functional department slow –technological breadth –project rarely given high priority

20 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 20 Figure 2-4 Matrix Project Organization

21 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 21 Matrix Project Organization 4 Advantages –flexibility in way it can interface with parent organization –strong focus on the project itself –contact with functional groups minimizes projectitis –ability to manage fundamental trade-offs across several projects 4 Drawbacks –violation of the Unity of Command principle –complexity of managing full set of projects –conflict

22 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 22 Figure 2-5 Mixed Project Organization

23 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 23 THE PROJECT TEAM

24 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 24 Characteristics of Effective Project Team Members 4 Technically Competent 4 Politically Sensitive 4 Problem Orientation 4 Goal Orientation 4 High Self-Esteem

25 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 25 Matrix Team Problems 4 Weak (Functional) Matrix –PM has no direct reports –Ability to communicate directly with team members important 4 Matrix Projects –Important to maintain good morale –Project Office

26 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 26 Intrateam Conflict 4 Life Cycle Phase and Source of Conflict 4 Name-Only Team 4 Interpersonal Conflict

27 Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team 27 Copyright Copyright  John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that named in Section 117 of the United States Copyright Act without the express written consent of the copyright owner is unlawful. Requests for further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Adopters of the textbook are granted permission to make back-up copies for their own use only, to make copies for distribution to students of the course the textbook is used in, and to modify this material to best suit their instructional needs. Under no circumstances can copies be made for resale. The Publisher assumes no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages, caused by the use of these programs or from the use of the information contained herein.


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