This is a practical primer drawn from the author's bestselling Project Management, giving a concise account of project management techniques, concentrating on the key tasks of project definition, organisation, estimating, planning and control.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note
Part 1 Introduction: projects; project management processes; project objectives; the time/cost relationship; the Association for Project Management. Part 2 Definition: the customer's project specification; project scope; use of checklists; the constractor's initial design specification; specification of production methods; construction specification; specifications for product development projects; developing the project specification; projects which are difficult or impossible to define; reference. Part 3 Organization: effective organization and communications; project teams versus functional group or matrix organizations; functional matrix organizations; variations of the matrix organization; project team organization; which type of organization is best?; the hybrid option; organizations with more than one project manager; the project manager himself; project services group. Part 4 Work breakdown and coding: family tree hierarchy; work breakdown structures for large projects; coding systems; benefits of a logical coding system; choosing a coding system. Part 5 Cost estimating: cost format; estimatingaccuracy; classification of estimates according to confidence; standard tables; profit estimates; manufacturing estimates with no drawings; personal estimating characteristics; estimates for material and equipment costs; below-th-line costs; planning; bar charts; critical path networks; the different network notation systems; critical path networks using arrow diagrams; precedence diagrams; case study the Gantry Project; level of detail in network diagrams; should a large network be broken down into smaller networks?; interface activities; milestones; is the predicted timescale too long?; early consideration ot resource constraints. (Part contents.).