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PROJECT
MANAGEMENT
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Dr. Kerzner’s 16 Points to Project
Management Maturity
1. Adopt a project management methodology and use it consistently.
2. Implement a philosophy that drives the company toward project
management maturity and communicate it to everyone.
3. Commit to developing effective plans at the beginning of each project.
4. Minimize scope changes by committing to realistic objectives.
5. Recognize that cost and schedule management are inseparable.
6. Select the right person as the project manager.
7. Provide executives with project sponsor information, not project
management information.
8. Strengthen involvement and support of line management.
9. Focus on deliverables rather than resources.
10. Cultivate effective communication, cooperation, and trust to achieve
rapid project management maturity.
11. Share recognition for project success with the entire project team and
line management.
12. Eliminate nonproductive meetings.
13. Focus on identifying and solving problems early, quickly, and cost
effectively.
14. Measure progress periodically.
15. Use project management software as a tool—not as a substitute for
effective planning or interpersonal skills.
16. Institute an all-employee training program with periodic updates based
upon documented lessons learned.
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P R O J E C T
MANAGEMENT
A Systems Approach to
Planning, Scheduling,
and Controlling
ELEVENTH EDITION
H A R O L D K E R Z N E R , P h . D .
Senior Executive Director for Project Management
The International Institute for Learning
New York, New York
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Cover illustration: xiaoke ma/iStockphoto
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Kerzner, Harold.
Project management : a systems approach to planning, scheduling, and controlling / Harold Kerzner, Ph. D. Senior Executive
Director for Project Management, the International Institute for Learning, New York, New York. — Eleventh edition.
pages cm
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-1-118-02227-6 (cloth); ISBN 978-1-118-41585-6 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-41855-0 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-43357-7
(ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-48322-0 (ebk); ISBN 978-1-118-48323-7 (ebk) 1. Project management. 2. Project management—Case
studies. I. Title.
HD69.P75K47 2013
658.4’04 —dc23
2012026239
Printed in the United States of America
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To
Dr. Herman Krier,
my Friend and Guru,
who taught me well the
meaning of the word “persistence”
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Contents
Preface xxiii
1 OVERVIEW 1
1.0 Introduction 1
1.1 Understanding Project Management 2
1.2 Defining Project Success 7
1.3 Success, Trade-Offs, and Competing Constraints 8
1.4 The Project Manager–Line Manager Interface 9
1.5 Defining the Project Manager’s Role 14
1.6 Defining the Functional Manager’s Role 15
1.7 Defining the Functional Employee’s Role 18
1.8 Defining the Executive’s Role 19
1.9 Working with Executives 19
1.10 Committee Sponsorship/Governance 20
1.11 The Project Manager as the Planning Agent 23
1.12 Project Champions 24
1.13 The Downside of Project Management 25
1.14 Project-Driven versus Non–Project-Driven Organizations 25
1.15 Marketing in the Project-Driven Organization 28
1.16 Classification of Projects 30
1.17 Location of the Project Manager 30
1.18 Differing Views of Project Management 32
1.19 Public-Sector Project Management 34
1.20 International Project Management 38
1.21 Concurrent Engineering: A Project Management Approach 38
1.22 Added Value 39
1.23 Studying Tips for the PMI®Project Management Certification Exam 40
Problems 42
Case Study
Williams Machine Tool Company 44
vii
Description:PMBOK® Guide, 5th edition, domain areas. The text contains more than 25 case studies, more than 125 multiple-choice questions Prayer, tarot cards, astrology, augurs, revelation, or other forms of divination. Some of the more complex decision-making tools are: ○ SWOT analysis: looking at the