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The Principles of Project Management

zedguy writes "Ask someone what 'project management' is and you're liable to get a few blank stares — it's one of those fields people have heard of, but probably have problems pinning down a definition. So that is what the first section of the book does: provides a definition that can be summed up as applying tools and skills to complete a project. That then leads to what exactly is a "project": a set of tasks with a time-frame and goal of somehow adding value. So yes, the introduction does involve a fair bit of terminology that isn't going to be familiar to many readers coming from a coder's background, but there's a helpful appendix that lays out many of the terms. Just as important, the introduction explains what project management is not, some of the misconceptions and why it's good to know." Keep reading for the rest of Zoltan's review. The Principles of Project Management author Meri Williams pages 204 publisher SitePoint / O'Reilly rating 8 reviewer Zoltan Hunt ISBN 0-9802858-6-0 summary A practical introduction to project management With the definitions out of the way, readers then get into the start-up tasks. First, there's looking for projects (find opportunities), deciding is it's a good opportunity (this is a bit of office politics — you want to know soon if the your project has the necessary support from management) and even if the task warrants a project — one of the key points is that a project is not on-going maintenance — it has a goal and a completion date.

Once you have decided to undertake a project, the next steps involve a proposal, identifying stakeholders, setting up an organizational chart and establishing communication protocols. This is the soft skill side of project management — a lot of the work is keeping the people the project is for interested and informed on where the project is heading. Much of the advice is practical — including dealing with the stakeholders who just aren't that interested in your project and picking a good project board — the less the better. Finally, once this is established it's time to make sure everyone is on the same page and agreed on the deliverables (the specific things the project will achieve).

By chapter three ("Getting the Job Done") we're into the actual material many readers (including myself) think of as project management — setting schedules, breaking deliverables into discrete tasks. For that, there's a lot of practical advice here — especially around making estimates and communicating them to stakeholders and team-members so they are not mis-interpreted as wild guesses or hard dates. Particularly good was the advice on refining estimates from a general size (is it a small, large or extra-large task), then, as the date got closer, change it to a more accurate estimate. As well as measuring performance, some management tools like work-flow and Gantt charts and issue lists are introduced in this chapter.

The last two chapters look at managing your team and completing the project. The "Keeping it smooth" chapter gives a good overview of the people management skills you will need working with team members. There's a fair bit of overage of team building (forming, storming, performing and adjourning) and a bit of coverage of collaboration over distances. Having done some small group management in the past, I think it covers all the bases well and it's applicable outside of project management as well.

Like many of the new SitePoint books this book explains a complex topic with a few illustrations and a clean layout. They're using that humorous information schema (light-bulb, bicycle horn, hand grenade) to good effect. One example of this is in Getting Started chapter: There is a section talking about what goes in a Project Initiation Document (PID), and there are break-out boxes on what it is not meant to take the place of.

For an example of the layout, the "Keeping it Smooth" chapter is a good example of how this book is organized; Topics are broken up by headings with points arranged as lists of short paragraphs, which makes it easy to skim. While it's a small book — 200 pages, about 25x20 cm — it's still good to be able to skim.

The glossary covers the particular usage of words in the project management domain.

Appendixes A-C list some tools,other resources (books and blogs) and C provides a list of qualifications and associations.

For a topic I was quite unfamiliar with when I started, I'd recommend this book as a good overview to the topic. The chapters follow a chronological order through a project — from picking a project — including those to avoid — planning and executing, managing the staff and stakeholders and finally, finishing your project and handing it off.

The author, Meri Williams, writes two blogs: GeekManager and Meriblog which readers might want to check out for further material. While each field has it's jargon, project management has a number to learn — and this book does a good job explain it.

You can purchase The Principles of Project Management from amazon.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.

18 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. Also on this topic by edwebdev · · Score: 5, Informative

    See also: The Mythical Man-Month by Fred Brooks.

    1. Re:Also on this topic by brunokummel · · Score: 5, Funny

      See also: Random Acts of Management by Scott Adams

      --
      What is best in life? To crush your enemies, to see them driven before you and to hear the lamentations of their women.
  2. Book version of a meeting? by omeomi · · Score: 4, Funny

    That then leads to what exactly is a "project": a set of tasks with a time-frame and goal of somehow adding value.

    Thank god we've gotten that out of the way. I guess now that we've adequately defined work, I can go get some work done. See ya'll at the next meeting.

  3. project management is more like "time accounting" by mediocubano · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seems to make more sense to me when I think of project managers as time accountants. They have time budgets and scopes and reports and things that relate along the lines of a financial manager running a business.

    Only Project Managers have completely different names for those things, but the better ones do a lot of time reporting and time budgeting.

  4. I bought Microsoft Project a while back by MichaelCrawford · · Score: 4, Funny
    I had just started on this huge C++ app, that was to take a year and lots of my client's money to develop, and figured that being my own project manager would be helpful. The client also wanted a time and cost estimate.

    Worst investment I ever made. My memory is hazy, but I seem to recall it set me back five hundred bucks.

    So with the manual open, I created a new project, and then the manual said "Enter your tasks".

    Well, Hell, if I knew what my tasks were, I wouldn't need a project management tool. I gave up on it completely.

    --
    Request your free CD of my piano music.
    1. Re:I bought Microsoft Project a while back by fm6 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yeah, I had the same problem with Microsoft Word. I bought it to write a novel. But it turns out you have to supply your own words!

      That title is very misleading.

    2. Re:I bought Microsoft Project a while back by glgraca · · Score: 3, Insightful

      MS Project paves the way to waterfall projects, mainly because most managers don't understand iterative development.

    3. Re:I bought Microsoft Project a while back by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 4, Insightful

      MS Project paves the way to waterfall projects, mainly because most managers don't understand iterative development.

      I'd say the problem is more general: most business people don't understand iterative development. They want hard deadlines and schedules and guarantees, even though software development doesn't really work that way.

      Essentially, they stick their heads in the sand and want software development to be just like manufacturing.

      Give most businesses a choice between a waterfall development PM and an iterative development PM, and they're going to pick the waterfall guy because he's willing to give them a (probably very inaccurate) deadline of when the whole giant project will be done.

    4. Re:I bought Microsoft Project a while back by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I don't know why iterative development excludes deadlines.

      It doesn't. Depending on your implementation, of course.

      Some approaches to iterative development have features but no deadline. The project is done when all the features are done, and no sooner. Tools give you projections on when that will be.

      Other approaches to iterative development have deadlines but no features. Or rather, no guarantees of what features will be available by that deadline. This is sometimes called "time-boxed development." You say, "Ok, we will definitely spend the next three months working on that. We will give you a release on exactly that day. What will be in the release is whatever we managed to get done in those three months."

      What iterative development does not give, when done properly, is both a committed list of features and a hard deadline. Why not? Simple: because in the vast majority of cases, a team will fail to deliver on these promises. This is largely due to a lack of process control (features changing during development, making the release an impossible-to-estimate moving target), misestimation, and discoveries (now that we have written this exactly to spec, we can clearly see why it utterly sucks, and why we need to change it all around right now).

      I have had many conversations with executives/managers who say, "ok, this time, let's make sure not to change the requirements once we get started, and to put a lot of effort into our estimates to make them accurate. If we do that, we can have commitments on both features and deadlines, right?" And then, despite these promises, the requirements change anyway, the estimates turn out to be inaccurate, and the deadlines are missed, and everyone is upset.

      If you are in an environment like this, it is better to not make promises, than to make promises and break them. Sell up the adaptability of your design process (sure, we can throw in your new idea right now!) as the benefit that justifies the lack of hard-and-fast promises of both features and delivery dates.

  5. Something they rarely teach managers by MikeRT · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Know when to cut your losses if you can. I used to work for a team that managed a component used by several projects at a large client, and one of those projects was run by a real textbook case of a nearly psychotic bully. After a while, my management decided that the pay wasn't worth the damage he was doing, and pulled our people off the contract.

    Our management was smart because they actually gauged the cost-benefit ratio of keeping our people on that contract and realized that yes, numbers might go up for a quarter or two, but employees would start leaving, and that would be worse for business than dropping the contract.

    1. Re:Something they rarely teach managers by CodeBuster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      and one of those projects was run by a real textbook case of a nearly psychotic bully In fact there is an anti-pattern specifically for that type of manager: cage match negotiator. The cage match negotiator takes a "win the argument at any cost" approach to dispute resolution, up to and including driving other team members off the project. The name comes from the cage match format in wrestling where multiple wrestlers enter the cage but only one exits victorious when the match is finished.
  6. Project Management is..... by onkelonkel · · Score: 5, Funny

    the technical discipline that tells us that nine women can make a baby in one month.

    --
    None of them can see the clouds; The polished wings don't care.
    1. Re:Project Management is..... by VisualStim · · Score: 5, Funny

      the technical discipline that tells us that nine women can make a baby in one month. ... yet still misses the requirement of at least one man on the project.
  7. Re:first post by alexj33 · · Score: 5, Funny

    PROJECT PHASES:
    Phase 1: Uncritical acceptance.
    Phase 2: Wild enthusiasm.
    Phase 3: Dejected disillusionment.
    Phase 4: Total confusion.
    Phase 5: Search for the guilty.
    Phase 6: Punishment of the innocent.
    Phase 7: Promotion of nonparticipants.

  8. Re:project management is more like "time accountin by metlin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not really.

    I'd say that Project Management involves juggling three things - Schedule, Scope and Budget (think of it as a triangle).

    Usually, any change in project direction, requirements, resources or funding affects one of the 3, and you need to juggle between the 3 to find an optimal state.

  9. The Two Key Project Management Thingys by avecfrites · · Score: 5, Informative

    From long experience, I can say that there are two things to do which get products out on time: 1) Pare requirements to the absolute minimum. Decide which features are required, and which are nice to have. And forget about the latter. (The engineers will stick some of those in on their own, according to their passions). 2) Keep everyone working in parallel. Ferret out any situations where someone is waiting for something, and eliminate those. And you'll see that in many cases those "waiting" scenarios indicate more serious misunderstandings about who is doing what.

  10. Re:Sad but so true by spaced-cadet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Large software projects can succeed but they require

    1) A PM experienced in software development
    2) Good communication and trust between the PM, the developers and the client
    3) Support from management, especially in making the correct resources available to the project at the correct time

    In my experience the two most common factors that contribute significantly to the failure of a project is poor specification and constraints exerted by the rest of the business on key resources.

  11. Another PMs Perspective by Stook · · Score: 5, Informative

    So I've read through many of the comments and have a few thoughts regarding them. My background comes from being a BA transitioning into a PM. I also have the PMI certification.

    1) While delegating out tasks and keeping track of time and budget are part of what a PM does, it's been my experience that the above is the minimum for a good PM. I've found that companies value not only someone who is going to manage the tasks, but also work with the business to help finalize the definition of the project and realize all the various business scenarios they will face before the project ever starts. This helps prevent scope creep and gives the architect a clearer picture of what is wanted. From my experience, I've never managed a project solely on tasks alone. If I don't understand the entire business aspect, I don't do the project.

    2) There is certainly a need for a PM and a Technical Architect. The distinction I've experienced is as a PM, it is my job to define how the system should work from an operational perspective and outline all business rules. It is the architect's responsibility to design the systems in a manner that will be reliable to meet the above directives.

    3) Waterfall vs. Iterative Development. My personal thoughts on this, and this is up for interpretation by anyone, is that the best method is a hybrid of the two. There's no reason I can't go through an intensive definition and design exercise prior to starting the project and outline all the business rules/operations. However, a good PM knows how to manage the business' (read executives) expectations on when the project will be completed. Always build in a buffer. Once the Project Plan is complete, iterative development can begin, working on chunks of functionality broken down into short term goals.

    4) Good PMs should be honest and stick up for the technical team as much as the business. They should know when to push back on which side.

    Now open for complaints...