Paperback : HK$475.00
Every project is an investment; however, traditional project management methodologies do not support assessment of the business value that enables senior management to maximize decision making. The next evolution in project management, therefore, will be to manage projects as investments. Managing Projects as Investments: Earned Value to Business Value provides tools and metrics to enable planning, measuring, evaluating, and optimizing projects.
This book shifts the paradigm. It builds on traditional scope-cost-schedule tools, adding a critical new focus on the expected value of projects and programs. The enhancements in processes and metrics allow senior management and PMOs to guide the entire organization on the basis of business benefits, and to ensure that decisions ranging from project selection to resource assignment facilitate those goals. The author shows how framing projects as investments enables significant improvement in project performance. He provides metrics that allow you and your team to track and maximize performance based on ROI.
Demonstrating the importance of recognizing an enabler project in a program, and why its value and cost of time are so great, the book provides the tools to determine right-sized staffing levels for project-driven organizations. It includes a comprehensive but easy-to-understand explanation of both basic and advanced earned value metrics, their shortcomings, and how they can be improved and shows you how to optimize contract terms on projects in a way that can avoid misaligned customer/contractor goals.
Show moreEvery project is an investment; however, traditional project management methodologies do not support assessment of the business value that enables senior management to maximize decision making. The next evolution in project management, therefore, will be to manage projects as investments. Managing Projects as Investments: Earned Value to Business Value provides tools and metrics to enable planning, measuring, evaluating, and optimizing projects.
This book shifts the paradigm. It builds on traditional scope-cost-schedule tools, adding a critical new focus on the expected value of projects and programs. The enhancements in processes and metrics allow senior management and PMOs to guide the entire organization on the basis of business benefits, and to ensure that decisions ranging from project selection to resource assignment facilitate those goals. The author shows how framing projects as investments enables significant improvement in project performance. He provides metrics that allow you and your team to track and maximize performance based on ROI.
Demonstrating the importance of recognizing an enabler project in a program, and why its value and cost of time are so great, the book provides the tools to determine right-sized staffing levels for project-driven organizations. It includes a comprehensive but easy-to-understand explanation of both basic and advanced earned value metrics, their shortcomings, and how they can be improved and shows you how to optimize contract terms on projects in a way that can avoid misaligned customer/contractor goals.
Show moreIntroduction: "A Disgrace to the Human Race!" Earned Value: What It Is and What It Isn’t. The Project as Investment. Planning the Project as Investment. Contracting and Controlling the Project as Investment. Projects within a Program. Managing the Investment at the Project Level. Managing Resources on the Critical Path. Postmortems and Lessons Learned. Selling the Investment Approach Internally. Conclusion.
Stephen A. Devaux, PMP, MSPM, is president of Analytic Project
Management (APM), a training and consulting company he founded in
1992. APM is a Global R.E.P. of the Project Management Institute
(PMI). Their clients include BAE Systems, Siemens, Wells Fargo,
Texas Instruments, Wyeth Pharmaceuticals, iRobot, L-3
Communications, American Power Conversion, Irving Oil, and
Respironics.
Devaux is the author of the book, Total Project Control: A
Manager’s Guide to Integrated Project Planning, Measuring, and
Tracking (1999, Wiley). He has worked to develop and use new
approaches and metrics in project management with clients in a wide
range of industries. “When the DIPP Dips” was published in the
Project Management Journal in 1992 (an article that was reprinted
in PMI’s Essentials of Project Control in 1999). He has contributed
chapters on his new scheduling metric, critical path drag, in two
2013 books: Project Management in the Oil and Gas Industries and
Handbook of Emergency Response. He has authored numerous articles
and PMI webinars, and is a frequent speaker at PMI chapter meetings
throughout the United States.
He began his career at Fidelity Investments, Citicorp, and the
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and then taught and consulted in
project management at Project Software and Development, Inc.
(PSDI). He has taught graduate project management courses at
Suffolk University, Brandeis University, and The University of the
West Indies/Barbados and in executive education programs at Bentley
University and University of Massachusetts/Lowell. Born in
Barbados, he has been living in the United States since 1964. He is
a Vietnam veteran and a naturalized US citizen. He lives with his
wife, Deborah, in Swampscott, Massachusetts.
"For first time users, this book is a valuable contribution to the
project management industry. Simple, clear, concise examples ensure
the understanding of the reader. … Good, clear, concise
descriptions of the theory certainly make the case for project
managers to use the methodology presented. [It] should help prevent
cost and time overruns, which too often occur. … very chatty style!
The summary points are very useful and time saving."
—Raphael M. Dua, Micro Planning International Asia Pacific Pty.
Ltd., Melbourne, Australia "… easy to follow and clearly explains
current project management methods and concepts in order to
introduce the, now seemly obvious, benefits of new ones. … an eye
opener and a career enhancer. This book challenges the project
manager to step out of his comfort zone and to start thinking like
a business manager who invests in value. Extremely well written
with no fluff, this book should not only be on every project
managers and senior managers bookshelf, but well-thumbed and ‘dog
eared’ from repeated reading.
—Emily Foster, Ten Six Consulting
"I am delighted to see an author address project management from
this innovative perspective. An investment is the keystone to
organizational success. If a project is viewed as such, more
resources and efforts will be directed at this, thereby increasing
the chances for success. Project management is an investment, not
an overhead. This book brings this fact to the forefront."
—Adedeji Badiru, Air Force Institute of Technology
"… approachable, clear and thought provoking. Mr. Devaux presents
the reader with the tools to improve their project management
maturity - tools essential to replacing intuition based decision
making with quantifiable and justifiable analysis."
—Bernard Ertl, Vice President, InterPlan Systems
"… is very useful to practitioners seeking to expand their
understanding on managing projects and project portfolios. The new
concepts may help even the experienced project managers. The layout
of the author’s rationales in driving towards the implications
contained in the chapters should also allow anyone new to project
management to follow and to understand the challenges and the best
practices in managing projects."
—Kuo-Ting Hung, Suffolk University
"In his book Stephen Devaux promotes innovative approach to project
management when project management goal is not just meeting triple
constraint but maximizing project business value. He suggested new
project metrics that is very useful for informed management
decisions and being properly used may save a fortune to project
owners."
—Vladimir Liberzon, Spider Project
"Steve Devaux identifies and illuminates the secret sauce that has
been at the root of many successful projects across multiple
industries. Outsiders looking in may attribute project success as
being at the right place at the right time or having a unique team
of superstars. However, successful project teams know the four
important ingredients: having a clear vision of product value,
executing the project to meet a market window, creating project
methodologies to deliver the project, and assembling the team with
the right skill diversity."
—Edward R Equi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
"… sets a foundation for the value of project delivery reliability
and it’s affect on the program/portfolio business case. In a
greater sense, it enlightens organizations regarding the value and
importance of improving their organizational project management
maturity. … takes a value driven approach to organizational project
management and is an enabler for Lean thinking with regards to
program or portfolio management."
—Joseph A. Sopko, Joseph A. Sopko Consulting, LLC
"This new book by Mr. Stephen A. Devaux explains detailed
methodology for enhancing project value with his original tools and
metrics which he has been developing these years. These ingenious
methodologies would surely be helpful for professionals in managing
projects and programs, I do believe."—Tomoichi Sato, JGC
Corporation/Tokyo University"The book is easy to follow and clearly
explains current project management methods and concepts in order
to introduce the, now seemly obvious, benefits of new ones.
Everything is very well presented with great examples and anecdotes
used to reinforce key points. All project managers regardless of
experience should read this book. It accurately captures project
management and its use today and offers a great new perspective and
methods to manage projects as investments and track performance
based on ROI. For most in our industry, this book should be an eye
opener and a career enhancer. This book challenges the reader to
step out of their comfort zone and to start thinking like a
business manager who invests in value. Extremely well written with
no fluff, this book should not only be on every project managers
and senior managers bookshelf, but well thumbed and ‘dog eared’
from repeated reading."
—Book Review by Ten Six Consulting
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