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Project management for dummies / Stanley E. Portny, Jonathan L. Portny.

By: Contributor(s): Series: For dummiesPublisher: Hoboken, New Jersey : John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2022Copyright date: ©2022Edition: 6th EditionISBN:
  • 111986982X
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 658.404 23
LOC classification:
  • HD69.P75 .P678 2022
Contents:
Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- About This Book -- Foolish Assumptions -- Icons Used in This Book -- Beyond the Book -- Where to Go from Here -- Part 1 Getting Started with Project Management -- Chapter 1 Project Management: The Key to Achieving Results -- Determining What Makes a Project a Project -- Understanding the three main components that define a project -- Recognizing the diversity of projects -- Describing the four phases of a project life cycle -- Adopting a Principled Approach to Project Management -- Starting with stewardship and leadership -- Continuing with team and stakeholders -- Delivering value and quality -- Handling complexity, opportunities, and threats -- Exhibiting adaptability and resilience -- Thinking holistically and enabling change -- What Happened to Process Groups and Knowledge Areas? -- Do You Have What It Takes to Be an Effective Project Manager? -- Questions -- Answer key -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 2 I'm a Project Manager! Now What? -- Knowing the Project Manager's Role -- Looking at the project manager's tasks -- Staving off excuses for not following a structured project management approach -- Avoiding shortcuts -- Staying aware of other potential challenges -- Aligning with the Four Values that Comprise the Code of Ethics -- The price of greatness is responsibility -- R-e-s-p-e-c-t, find out what it means to. . .your project -- Maintaining fairness -- Honesty is the best policy -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 3 Beginning the Journey: The Genesis of a Project -- Gathering Ideas for Projects -- Looking at information sources for potential projects -- Proposing a project in a business case -- Developing the Project Charter -- Performing a cost-benefit analysis -- Conducting a feasibility study.
Generating documents during the development of the project charter -- Deciding Which Projects to Move to the Second Phase of Their Life Cycle -- Tailoring Your Delivery Approach -- For the organization -- For the project -- Identifying the Models, Methods, and Artifacts to Use -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 4 Knowing Your Project's Stakeholders: Involving the Right People -- Understanding Your Project's Stakeholders -- Developing a Stakeholder Register -- Starting your stakeholder register -- Using specific categories -- Considering stakeholders that are often overlooked -- Examining the beginning of a sample stakeholder register -- Ensuring your stakeholder register is complete and up-to-date -- Using a stakeholder register template -- Determining Whether Stakeholders Are Drivers, Supporters, or Observers -- Deciding when to involve your stakeholders -- Drivers -- Supporters -- Observers -- Using different methods to involve your stakeholders -- Making the most of your stakeholders' involvement -- Displaying Your Stakeholder Register -- Confirming Your Stakeholders' Authority -- Assessing Your Stakeholders' Power and Interest -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 5 Clarifying What You're Trying to Accomplish - And Why -- Defining Your Project with a Scope Statement -- Looking at the Big Picture: Explaining the Need for Your Project -- Figuring out why you're doing the project -- Identifying the initiator -- Determining who is contributing funds to support the project -- Recognizing other people who may benefit from your project -- Distinguishing the project champion -- Considering people who'll implement the results of your project -- Determining your project drivers' real expectations and needs -- Confirming that your project can address people's needs.
Uncovering other activities that relate to your project -- Emphasizing your project's importance to your organization -- Being exhaustive in your search for information -- Drawing the line: Where your project starts and stops -- Stating your project's objectives -- Making your objectives clear and specific -- Probing for all types of objectives -- Anticipating resistance to clearly defined objectives -- Marking Boundaries: Project Constraints -- Working within limitations -- Understanding the types of limitations -- Looking for project limitations -- Addressing limitations in your scope statement -- Dealing with needs -- Facing the Unknowns When Planning: Documenting Your Assumptions -- Presenting Your Scope Statement in a Clear and Concise Document -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 6 Developing Your Game Plan: Getting from Here to There -- Divide and Conquer: Breaking Your Project into Manageable Chunks -- Thinking in detail -- Identifying necessary project work with a work breakdown structure -- Asking four key questions -- Making assumptions to clarify planned work -- Focusing on results when naming deliverables -- Using action verbs to title activities -- Developing a WBS for large and small projects -- Understanding a project's deliverables-activities hierarchy -- Dealing with special situations -- Representing conditionally repeating work -- Handling work with no obvious break points -- Planning a long-term project -- Issuing a contract for services you will receive -- Creating and Displaying Your Work Breakdown Structure -- Considering different schemes to create your WBS hierarchy -- Using one of two approaches to develop your WBS -- The top-down approach -- The brainstorming approach -- Categorizing your project's work -- Labeling your WBS entries -- Displaying your WBS in different formats.
The organization-chart format -- The indented-outline format -- The bubble-chart format -- Improving the quality of your WBS -- Using templates -- Drawing on previous experience -- Improving your WBS templates -- Identifying Risks While Detailing Your Work -- Documenting What You Need to Know about Your Planned Project Work -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Part 2 Planning Time: Determining When and How Much -- Chapter 7 You Want This Project Done When? -- Picture This: Illustrating a Work Plan with a Network Diagram -- Defining a network diagram's elements -- Milestone -- Activity -- Duration -- Drawing a network diagram -- Analyzing a Network Diagram -- Reading a network diagram -- Interpreting a network diagram -- The importance of the critical path -- The forward pass: Determining critical paths, noncritical paths, and earliest start and finish dates -- The backward pass: Calculating the latest start and finish dates and slack times -- Working with Your Project's Network Diagram -- Determining precedence -- Looking at factors that affect predecessors -- Choosing immediate predecessors -- Using a network diagram to analyze a simple example -- Deciding on the activities -- Setting the order of the activities -- Creating the network diagram -- Developing Your Project's Schedule -- Taking the first steps -- Avoiding the pitfall of backing in to your schedule -- Meeting an established time constraint -- Applying different strategies to arrive at your picnic in less time -- Performing activities at the same time -- Estimating Activity Duration -- Determining the underlying factors -- Considering resource characteristics -- Improving activity duration estimates -- Displaying Your Project's Schedule -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 8 Establishing Whom You Need, How Much of Their Time, and When.
Getting the Information You Need to Match People to Tasks -- Deciding what skills and knowledge team members must have -- Representing team members' skills, knowledge, and interests in a skills matrix -- Estimating Needed Commitment -- Using a human resources matrix -- Identifying needed personnel in a human resources matrix -- Estimating required work effort -- Factoring productivity, efficiency, and availability into work-effort estimates -- Reflecting efficiency when you use historical data -- Accounting for efficiency in personal work-effort estimates -- Ensuring Your Project Team Members Can Meet Their Resource Commitments -- Planning your initial allocations -- Resolving potential resource overloads -- Coordinating assignments across multiple projects -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 9 Planning for Other Resources and Developing the Budget -- Determining Non-Personnel Resource Needs -- Making Sense of the Dollars: Project Costs and Budgets -- Looking at different types of project costs -- Recognizing the three stages of a project budget -- Refining your budget as your project progresses -- Determining project costs for a detailed budget estimate -- The bottom-up approach -- The top-down approach -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 10 Venturing into the Unknown: Dealing with Risk -- Defining Risk and Risk Management -- Focusing on Risk Factors and Risks -- Recognizing risk factors -- Identifying risks -- Assessing Risks: Probability and Consequences -- Gauging the likelihood of a risk -- Relying on objective info -- Counting on personal opinions -- Estimating the extent of the consequences -- Getting Everything under Control: Managing Risk -- Choosing the risks you want to manage -- Developing a risk management strategy -- Communicating about risks -- Preparing a Risk Management Plan.
Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7.
Holdings
Item type Home library Class number Status Date due Barcode
Book, Standard Loan (4 weeks) Mersey and West Lancashire NHS Library (St Helens and Knowsley) Main Shelves 658.404 POR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available SHK00000222

Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Introduction -- About This Book -- Foolish Assumptions -- Icons Used in This Book -- Beyond the Book -- Where to Go from Here -- Part 1 Getting Started with Project Management -- Chapter 1 Project Management: The Key to Achieving Results -- Determining What Makes a Project a Project -- Understanding the three main components that define a project -- Recognizing the diversity of projects -- Describing the four phases of a project life cycle -- Adopting a Principled Approach to Project Management -- Starting with stewardship and leadership -- Continuing with team and stakeholders -- Delivering value and quality -- Handling complexity, opportunities, and threats -- Exhibiting adaptability and resilience -- Thinking holistically and enabling change -- What Happened to Process Groups and Knowledge Areas? -- Do You Have What It Takes to Be an Effective Project Manager? -- Questions -- Answer key -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 2 I'm a Project Manager! Now What? -- Knowing the Project Manager's Role -- Looking at the project manager's tasks -- Staving off excuses for not following a structured project management approach -- Avoiding shortcuts -- Staying aware of other potential challenges -- Aligning with the Four Values that Comprise the Code of Ethics -- The price of greatness is responsibility -- R-e-s-p-e-c-t, find out what it means to. . .your project -- Maintaining fairness -- Honesty is the best policy -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 3 Beginning the Journey: The Genesis of a Project -- Gathering Ideas for Projects -- Looking at information sources for potential projects -- Proposing a project in a business case -- Developing the Project Charter -- Performing a cost-benefit analysis -- Conducting a feasibility study.

Generating documents during the development of the project charter -- Deciding Which Projects to Move to the Second Phase of Their Life Cycle -- Tailoring Your Delivery Approach -- For the organization -- For the project -- Identifying the Models, Methods, and Artifacts to Use -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 4 Knowing Your Project's Stakeholders: Involving the Right People -- Understanding Your Project's Stakeholders -- Developing a Stakeholder Register -- Starting your stakeholder register -- Using specific categories -- Considering stakeholders that are often overlooked -- Examining the beginning of a sample stakeholder register -- Ensuring your stakeholder register is complete and up-to-date -- Using a stakeholder register template -- Determining Whether Stakeholders Are Drivers, Supporters, or Observers -- Deciding when to involve your stakeholders -- Drivers -- Supporters -- Observers -- Using different methods to involve your stakeholders -- Making the most of your stakeholders' involvement -- Displaying Your Stakeholder Register -- Confirming Your Stakeholders' Authority -- Assessing Your Stakeholders' Power and Interest -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 5 Clarifying What You're Trying to Accomplish - And Why -- Defining Your Project with a Scope Statement -- Looking at the Big Picture: Explaining the Need for Your Project -- Figuring out why you're doing the project -- Identifying the initiator -- Determining who is contributing funds to support the project -- Recognizing other people who may benefit from your project -- Distinguishing the project champion -- Considering people who'll implement the results of your project -- Determining your project drivers' real expectations and needs -- Confirming that your project can address people's needs.

Uncovering other activities that relate to your project -- Emphasizing your project's importance to your organization -- Being exhaustive in your search for information -- Drawing the line: Where your project starts and stops -- Stating your project's objectives -- Making your objectives clear and specific -- Probing for all types of objectives -- Anticipating resistance to clearly defined objectives -- Marking Boundaries: Project Constraints -- Working within limitations -- Understanding the types of limitations -- Looking for project limitations -- Addressing limitations in your scope statement -- Dealing with needs -- Facing the Unknowns When Planning: Documenting Your Assumptions -- Presenting Your Scope Statement in a Clear and Concise Document -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 6 Developing Your Game Plan: Getting from Here to There -- Divide and Conquer: Breaking Your Project into Manageable Chunks -- Thinking in detail -- Identifying necessary project work with a work breakdown structure -- Asking four key questions -- Making assumptions to clarify planned work -- Focusing on results when naming deliverables -- Using action verbs to title activities -- Developing a WBS for large and small projects -- Understanding a project's deliverables-activities hierarchy -- Dealing with special situations -- Representing conditionally repeating work -- Handling work with no obvious break points -- Planning a long-term project -- Issuing a contract for services you will receive -- Creating and Displaying Your Work Breakdown Structure -- Considering different schemes to create your WBS hierarchy -- Using one of two approaches to develop your WBS -- The top-down approach -- The brainstorming approach -- Categorizing your project's work -- Labeling your WBS entries -- Displaying your WBS in different formats.

The organization-chart format -- The indented-outline format -- The bubble-chart format -- Improving the quality of your WBS -- Using templates -- Drawing on previous experience -- Improving your WBS templates -- Identifying Risks While Detailing Your Work -- Documenting What You Need to Know about Your Planned Project Work -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Part 2 Planning Time: Determining When and How Much -- Chapter 7 You Want This Project Done When? -- Picture This: Illustrating a Work Plan with a Network Diagram -- Defining a network diagram's elements -- Milestone -- Activity -- Duration -- Drawing a network diagram -- Analyzing a Network Diagram -- Reading a network diagram -- Interpreting a network diagram -- The importance of the critical path -- The forward pass: Determining critical paths, noncritical paths, and earliest start and finish dates -- The backward pass: Calculating the latest start and finish dates and slack times -- Working with Your Project's Network Diagram -- Determining precedence -- Looking at factors that affect predecessors -- Choosing immediate predecessors -- Using a network diagram to analyze a simple example -- Deciding on the activities -- Setting the order of the activities -- Creating the network diagram -- Developing Your Project's Schedule -- Taking the first steps -- Avoiding the pitfall of backing in to your schedule -- Meeting an established time constraint -- Applying different strategies to arrive at your picnic in less time -- Performing activities at the same time -- Estimating Activity Duration -- Determining the underlying factors -- Considering resource characteristics -- Improving activity duration estimates -- Displaying Your Project's Schedule -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 8 Establishing Whom You Need, How Much of Their Time, and When.

Getting the Information You Need to Match People to Tasks -- Deciding what skills and knowledge team members must have -- Representing team members' skills, knowledge, and interests in a skills matrix -- Estimating Needed Commitment -- Using a human resources matrix -- Identifying needed personnel in a human resources matrix -- Estimating required work effort -- Factoring productivity, efficiency, and availability into work-effort estimates -- Reflecting efficiency when you use historical data -- Accounting for efficiency in personal work-effort estimates -- Ensuring Your Project Team Members Can Meet Their Resource Commitments -- Planning your initial allocations -- Resolving potential resource overloads -- Coordinating assignments across multiple projects -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 9 Planning for Other Resources and Developing the Budget -- Determining Non-Personnel Resource Needs -- Making Sense of the Dollars: Project Costs and Budgets -- Looking at different types of project costs -- Recognizing the three stages of a project budget -- Refining your budget as your project progresses -- Determining project costs for a detailed budget estimate -- The bottom-up approach -- The top-down approach -- Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7 -- Chapter 10 Venturing into the Unknown: Dealing with Risk -- Defining Risk and Risk Management -- Focusing on Risk Factors and Risks -- Recognizing risk factors -- Identifying risks -- Assessing Risks: Probability and Consequences -- Gauging the likelihood of a risk -- Relying on objective info -- Counting on personal opinions -- Estimating the extent of the consequences -- Getting Everything under Control: Managing Risk -- Choosing the risks you want to manage -- Developing a risk management strategy -- Communicating about risks -- Preparing a Risk Management Plan.

Relating This Chapter to the PMP Exam and PMBOK 7.

Description based on print version record.