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Project Management Planning explores the science and art of
handling planned responsibility and unexpected conditions. The
processes of planning contents (initiating, planning, executing,
controlling, closing) and the attributes of planning contents
(scope, time, resources, cost, quality, risk, benefit, others) are
generally common. For that reason, comprehensive project management
planning applies across all types of projects and all kinds of
planning situations, including, for example, the Agile sequence of
shortterm investments or in Critical Chain Buffer management.
Evidence shows two massive gaps in project management planning
across the field, which this book hopes to address. The first gap
is between current project management planning and its potential as
a practical discipline. The second gap is between project
management system knowledge and its potential as an applied
research discipline. This book first explains how a project
management plan develops from project management contents, before
using the same tools to explain how project management system logic
develops from project management system contents. Finally, it shows
how project management system contents and its logic improve
project management contents. By understanding how a project
management plan develops into a project management systems logic,
we can implement strong plans across programs, businesses and
corporations, organizations, and any entity for which managing
plans is an integral part.
Project Management Planning explores the science and art of
handling planned responsibility and unexpected conditions. The
processes of planning contents (initiating, planning, executing,
controlling, closing) and the attributes of planning contents
(scope, time, resources, cost, quality, risk, benefit, others) are
generally common. For that reason, comprehensive project management
planning applies across all types of projects and all kinds of
planning situations, including, for example, the Agile sequence of
shortterm investments or in Critical Chain Buffer management.
Evidence shows two massive gaps in project management planning
across the field, which this book hopes to address. The first gap
is between current project management planning and its potential as
a practical discipline. The second gap is between project
management system knowledge and its potential as an applied
research discipline. This book first explains how a project
management plan develops from project management contents, before
using the same tools to explain how project management system logic
develops from project management system contents. Finally, it shows
how project management system contents and its logic improve
project management contents. By understanding how a project
management plan develops into a project management systems logic,
we can implement strong plans across programs, businesses and
corporations, organizations, and any entity for which managing
plans is an integral part.
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