It sounded good when we started : a project manager's guide to working with people on projects / Dwayne Phillips, Roy O'Bryan.
By: Phillips, Dwayne.
Contributor(s): O'Bryan, Roy | IEEE Xplore (Online Service) [distributor.] | John Wiley & Sons [publisher.] | IEEE Computer Society | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers.
Material type: BookSeries: Practitioners: 61Publisher: Hokoken, New Jersey : John Wiley & Sons, c2004Distributor: [Piscataqay, New Jersey] : IEEE Xplore, [2004]Description: 1 PDF (xvii, 319 pages).Content type: text Media type: electronic Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780471723172; 0471723177.Subject(s): Project management | Antennas | Assembly | Auditory system | Awards activities | Biomedical monitoring | Buildings | Calendars | Cardiac arrest | Clocks | Cognition | Companies | Computational modeling | Computers | Conferences | Connectors | Contracts | Control systems | Crisis management | Decision making | Demodulation | Engineering profession | Facsimile | Fans | Finishing | Government | Hardware | Heat sinks | History | Incentive schemes | Indexes | Information technology | Investments | Jitter | Layout | Legged locomotion | MONOS devices | Maintenance engineering | Mass production | Materials | Microscopy | Monitoring | Nose | Operating systems | Optical microscopy | Organizations | Outsourcing | Personal digital assistants | Planning | Power filters | Power supplies | Production | Program processors | Project management | Proposals | Prototypes | Quality assurance | Radio access networks | Radio frequency | Risk management | Roads | Schedules | Security | Software | Standards | Standards organizations | Supercomputers | Test equipment | Testing | Thumb | Timing | User interfaces | Watches | Web pages | Wireless communication | Workstations | WritingGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: No titleOnline resources: Abstract with links to resource Also available in print.Preface. -- Part 1. -- 1. It Sounded Good When We Started. -- 2. A Place Where Everyone Knows Your Name: The Project Room. -- Part 2. -- 3. A Charlatan in Expert's Clothing: Writing a Lie-The Proposal. -- 4. Leaving the Station Before Everyone Is on Board: Staffing-Up. -- 5. After The Party Is Over: Letting Everyone Do Their Own Thing. -- Part 3. -- 6. Months Have 30 Days in Them, Except Those That Don't: Planning. -- 7. Be Careful What You Ask For, You Just Might Get It: The Requirements. -- 8. If I Could Just Find a Question for this Answer: Designing Before the Fact. -- 9. A Miracle Occurs Here: Schedule Tracking. -- 10. Getting Mugged by the Facts: Risk Mitigation Strategies. -- Part 4. -- 11. A Charlatan in Sheep's Clothing: The Right Project Manager. -- 12. But You Didn't Ask-Communicating with the Customer. -- 13. A Penny Saved Is A Penny Earned: Maximum Reward versus Minimum Regret. -- 14. Punish the Innocent By-Standers: Award Fee, Bonuses and Other Rewards and Punishments. -- Part 5. -- 15. Digging Yourself Into A Hole: Put Down The Shovel And Seek Outside Help. -- 16. Fear of Stepping on Superman's Cape: Not Holding Meaningful Internal Reviews. -- 17. Not Providing Adult Supervision: Do the Junior Team Members Really Need Mentoring? -- Part 6. -- 18. Being Too Big For Your Britches: So Much Confidence With So Little Talent (Experience). -- 19. Appointed Experts: Who Brings What To The Table. -- Part 7. -- 20. The Shallow End of The Gene Pool: Small Projects and Large Corporations. -- 21. Telling Your Customer What You Think He Wants To Hear and Believing It: Outsourcing. -- 22. Going Where Angels Fear to Tread: There Is No Right Way to Do The Wrong Thing. -- Part 8. -- 23. Not Knowing What You Know: Are You Really Getting The Desired Results? -- 24. Don't Forget to Breathe: What People Often Do Wrong When Behind Schedule. -- 25. We're Almost Out of the Woods: You Aren't Finished Until You Are Finished. -- Index.
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A commonsense guide to real-world project managementCommon sense isn't always commonly practiced. Anyone who has ever worked on a project in a technical setting knows this. Indeed, much of working with others consists of solving unexpected problems and learning from mistakes along the way. It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager's Guide to Working with People on Projects is essential reading for project managers trying to understand the trials and triumphs that can arise in any project setting. The authors, both respected project managers with sixty years of experience between them, describe their own mistakes as well as the many valuable lessons they drew from them. Instead of trying to formulate these in abstract theory, Phillips and O'Bryan tell the stories surrounding a particular project, providing a more memorable, real-world, and practical set of examples. Written in a distinctly nontechnical style, this title is a general troubleshooting guide for people who work on projects with other individuals. As such, its content will prove useful in many different settings and applies to many different kinds of endeavors. Most of the stories center around problemssince it's the problems we often remember more than the successesand what was learned from them. After describing a given problem, the authors analyze the issues that led to it and work towards various ways they've discovered of creating a better project environment, one where problems get solved more easily and happen less frequently.It Sounded Good When We Started offers a highly readable go-to guide for project managers, engineers, scientists, computer professionals, and anyone working on specialized, collaborative projects.
Also available in print.
Mode of access: World Wide Web
Description based on PDF viewed 12/21/2015.
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