<< Chapter < Page | Chapter >> Page > |
A method of planning and managing projects that puts more emphasis on the resources required to execute project tasks.
The key factors that are deemed critical to the success of the project. The nature of these factors will govern the response to conflicts, risks and the setting of priorities.
A person's attitudes arising out of their professional, religious, class, educational, gender, age and other backgrounds.
See client.
A deliverable is any tangible outcome that is produced by the project. All projects create deliverables. These can be documents, plans, computer systems, buildings, aircraft, etc. Internal deliverables are produced as a consequence of executing the project and are usually needed only by the project team. External deliverables are those that are created for clients and stakeholders. Your project may create one or many deliverables.
Dependencies on a project are the relationships between activities whereby one activity must do something (finish-to-start) before another activity can do something (start-to-finish).
The duration of a project's terminal element is the number of calendar periods it takes from the time the execution of element starts to the moment it is completed.
A project management technique for measuring project progress in an objective manner, with a combination of measuring scope, schedule, and cost in a single integrated system.
An extension to earned value management (EVM), which renames two traditional measures, to indicate clearly they are in units of currency or quantity, not time.
In project management it is the processes of making accurate estimates using the appropriate techniques.
A diagram that show the relationships between events and tasks and how the events affect each other.
An uncertainty modeling and schedule network analysis technique that is focused on identifying and managing events and event chains that affect project schedules.
In a project network is the amount of time that a task in a project network can be delayed without causing a delay to subsequent tasks and or the project completion date.
The functional manager is the person you report to within your functional organization. Typically, this is the person who does your performance review. The project manager may also be a functional manager, but he or she does not have to be. If your project manager is different from your functional manager, your organization is probably utilizing matrix management.
An American mechanical engineer and management consultant, who developed the Gantt chart in the 1910s.
A Gantt chart is a bar chart that depicts activities as blocks over time. The beginning and end of the block correspond to the beginning and end-date of the activity.
An objective that consists of a projected state of affairs which a person or a system plans or intends to achieve or bring about a personal or organizational desired end-point in some sort of assumed development. Many people endeavor to reach goals within a finite time by setting deadlines.
Notification Switch
Would you like to follow the 'Project management' conversation and receive update notifications?