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Organizational Project Portfolio Management: A Practitioner's Guide
offers a generic, practical methodology and tool kit to design,
build, and manage a balanced portfolio at any level of the
enterprise. These techniques can be used irrespective of business
industry, where the portfolio management group is located within
the organizational hierarchy, or the type of projects contained.
Key Features: Discusses how the principles of financial portfolio
management are applicable to project portfolios, and outlines the
three key steps to achieving a profitable project portfolio: 1)
Defining your project investment strategy, 2) Selecting the right
projects, and 3) Effectively managing them Presents a model and PPM
methodology for a balanced portfolio based on concepts similar to a
framework known as the 'balanced scorecard' that allows you to
create a balance along any project characteristic such as size,
risk, and development time Demonstrates how earned value management
techniques can be effectively applied at the portfolio level and
addresses risk and uncertainty Explains how to reprioritize
projects when resources become limited, utilize key metrics to
monitor and manage portfolio performance, and determine whether a
project should be continued or terminated Uses a case study to
illustrates how you can apply the methods and tools presented
throughout the text and includes case study exercises to enhance
the learning process WAV offers downloadable charts for managing
resources, discounted cash flow and Monte Carlo simulation
spreadsheets, and worksheets for portfolio and project case
examples in the book - available from the Web Added Value Download
Resource Center
Business leaders are frequently faced with investment decisions on
new and ongoing projects. The challenge lies in deciding what
projects to choose, expand, contract, defer, or abandon, and which
method of valuation to use is the key tool in the process. This
title presents a step-by-step, practical approach to real options
valuation to make it easily understandable by practitioners as well
as senior management. This systematic approach to project valuation
helps you minimize upfront investment risks, exercise flexibility
in decision making, and maximize the returns. Whereas the
traditional decision tools such as discounted cash flow/net present
value (DCF/NPV) analysis assume a ""fixed"" path ahead, real
options analysis offers more flexible strategies. Considered one of
the greatest innovations of modern finance, the real options
approach is based on Nobel-prize winning work by three MIT
economists, Fischer Black, Robert Merton, and Myron Scholes.
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