The Traditional Approach: Project Management Notes
The Traditional Approach: Project Management Notes
The Traditional Approach: Project Management Notes
Project management is the discipline of carefully projecting or planning, organizing, motivating and
controlling resources to achieve specific goals and meet specific success criteria. A project is a temporary
endeavor designed to produce a unique product, service or result with a defined beginning and end
(usually time-constrained, and often constrained by funding or deliverables) undertaken to meet unique
goals and objectives, typically to bring about beneficial change or added value.
The primary challenge of project management is to achieve all of the project goals[5] and objectives while
honoring the preconceived constraints.[6] The primary constraints arescope, time, quality and budget.[7] The
secondary and more ambitious challenge is to optimize the allocation of necessary inputs and
integrate them to meet pre-defined objectives
As a discipline, project management developed from several fields of application including civil
construction, engineering, and heavy defense activity.[10] Two forefathers of project management are Henry
Gantt, called the father of planning and control techniques,[11] who is famous for his use of the Gantt
chart as a project management tool (alternatively Harmonogram first proposed by Karol Adamiecki[12]);
and Henri Fayol for his creation of the five management functions that form the foundation of the body of
knowledge associated with project and program management.[13] Both Gantt and Fayol were students
of Frederick Winslow Taylor's theories of scientific management.
1. initiation
2. planning and design
3. execution and construction
4. monitoring and controlling systems
5. completion and finish point
An idea for a project will be carefully examined to determine whether or not it benefits the
organization. During this phase, a decision making team will identify if the project can
realistically be completed.
A project plan, project charter and/or project scope may be put in writing, outlining the work
to be performed. During this phase, a team should prioritize the project, calculate a budget
and schedule, and determine what resources are needed.
Resources' tasks are distributed and teams are informed of responsibilities. This is a good
time to bring up important project related information.
Project managers will compare project status and progress to the actual plan, as resources
perform the scheduled work. During this phase, project managers may need to adjust
schedules or do what is necessary to keep the project on track.
5. Project close
After project tasks are completed and the client has approved the outcome, an evaluation is
necessary to highlight project success and/or learn from project history.
Projects and project management processes vary from industry to industry; however, these
are more traditional elements of a project. The overarching goal is typically to offer a
product, change a process or to solve a problem in order to benefit the organization.
types/forms
The current types of organizational structure of project management are: functional organizational
structure, project-based organizational structure and matrix organizational structure.
1. Functional organizational structure.
Functional organizational structure is to be managed in the current organization hierarchical structure, once
the project begins operation, the various components of the project are taken by the functional units, each
unit is responsible for its charged component. If the the project established, a functional area play a
dominant role, functional areas on completion of the project, senior managers will be responsible for project
coordination.
Advantages of this structure: First, the use of personnel with greater flexibility, as long as the choice of a
suitable functional departments as the project supervisor, the department will be able to provide
professional and technical personnel required by the project, and technology experts can also be used by
different projects and after completion of the work can go back to his original work; Second, when the
project team members leave or leave the company, the functions can be used as the basis for maintaining
the continuity of the project; third, functional department can provide a normal career path for professionals.
The disadvantage of this structure is: First, projects often lack of focus, each unit has its own core
functions of general business, sometimes in order to meet their basic needs, responsibility for the project
will be ignored, especially when the interest taken in the project brought to the unit not the same
interest; Second, such organization has certain difficulties in the inter-departmental cooperation and
exchanges; Third motivation is not strong enough for project participants, they think the project is an
additional burden, and not directly related to their career development and upgrading; Fourth, in such
organizational structure, sometimes no one should assume full responsibility for the project, often the
project manager is only responsible for part of the project, others are responsible for the other parts of the
project, which leads to difficulties in coordination situation.
2. Project-based organizational structure.
Project organizational structure refers to the creation of an independent project team, the teams
management is separated from the parent organizations other units, have their own technical staff and
management, enterprise assigns certain resources to project team, and grant project manager of the
largest free implementation of the project .
The advantages of this structure: First, focus on this project team, project manager is solely responsible
for the project, the only task for project members is to complete the project, and they only report to the
project manager, avoiding the multiple leadership; Second, the project teams decision is developed within
the project, the reaction time is short; Third, in this project, members work with strong power, high
cohesion, participants shared the common goal of the project, and individual has clear responsibilities.
The disadvantage of this organizational structure: First, when a company has several projects, each
project has its own separate team, which will lead to duplication of efforts and the loss of scalable
economies; Second, the project team itself is an independent entity, prone to a condition known as Project
inflammatory disease, that is, there is a clear dividing line between the project team and the parent
organization, weakening the effective integration between project team and the parent organization; Third,
the project team members lack of a business continuity and security, once the project ended, return to their
original functions may be more difficult.
3. Matrix organizational structure.
Matrix organizational structure is a hybrid form, it loads a level of project management structure on the
functional hierarchical structure. According to the relative power of project managers and functional
managers, in practice there are different types of matrix systems, respectively,Functional Matrix: in this
matrix, functional managers have greater powers than project managers); Project Matrix: in this matrix,
project managers have greater powers than functional managers); Balance Matrix: in this matrix,
functional managers and project managers have the equal powers.
The advantages of this organizational structure: First, it is the same as functional structure that
resources can be shared in multiple projects, which can significantly reduces the problem of redundant
staff; Second, project is the focus of work, with a formal designated project manager will make him give
more attention to the project, and responsible for the coordination and integration work between different
units; Third, when there are multiple projects simultaneously, the company can balance the resources to
ensure that all the projects can progress to complete their respective costs and quality
requirements; Fourth, the anxiety of project members is reduced greatly after the end of the project, while
they are strongly associated with the project, on the other hand, they have a home feeling about their
functions.
The disadvantage is that this organizational structure: First, the matrix structure has exacerbated the
tensions between functional manager and project manager; Second, under any circumstances, sharing
equipment, resources and personnel among different projects will lead to conflict and competition for
scarce resources; Third, in the process of project implementation, the project manager must negotiate and
consult with the department managers on various issues, which leads to the delay in decision
making; Fourth, matrix management is not according to the principles of unified management, project
members have two bosses, the project manager and functional managers, when their commands are
divided, it will make members at a loss.
Three different forms of the matrix organizational structure does not necessarily have the advantages and
disadvantages described above: Project Matrix can increase the projects integration, reduce internal power
struggle, its weakness is poor control of their functional areas and prone to project inflammation;
Functional Matrix can provide a better system for managing the conflict between different projects, but
maintaining the control of functions is at the cost of inefficient integration of projects; Balanced Matrix can
achieve the balance between technology and project requirements better, but its establishment and
management is very subtle, is likely to encounter many problems related to matrix organization.