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Hardcover Project Management: Best Practices for It Professionals Book

ISBN: 0130219142

ISBN13: 9780130219145

Project Management: Best Practices for It Professionals

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Master project management, todays most critical business skill Project management leadership is todays no.1 business skill. Talented, knowledgeable project managers command the best assignments and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Unique and Unusual Book - Highly Recommended

I've been an IT project manager for about 30 years, working on every type of project, style and size. I have managed projects from a team of 1- to over 400 FTE's. I have just gone back to get my Master's in PM and this book helped me to attain that goal. This book was used as a textbook in one of my classes. It provides the clearest, most concise directions for project management skills I have ever seen ( and I have seen many. The writing style is precise, clear and imparts knowledge though out. The book is well structured and logical in its various sections, and anyone trying to get their IT management to buy into the concept of project management training would do well to champion this book.Clearly, Mr. Murch has done the project management profession a great service by providing it with a text that can be used for many years to come. I highly recommend it for all PMs - either experienced, novice or intermediate. There is something here for everyone.The best reason for reading this book is it will give you the tools and techniques with which to properly manage projects and be successful.Get it - Read it- Learn from it.

Great collection of best practices (has one glaring gap)

This is not a book about project management, rather it is a collection of IT project management best practices that will guarantee success if they are incorporated into your project management bag of tricks.Mr. Murch has classified the best practices by providing a set of general practices and a set of specific ones that are aligned to each phase of the system development life cycle. This organization allows you to use this book as a resource guide when planning, estimating and scheduling the project, and as a desk reference when controlling it.While some of the best practices are widely known (although not as widely practiced), the real gems in this book are: associating tasks with deliverables (too often the deliverable part of the task is not identified during planning, which results in tasks that do not contribute to project goals - if a task does not produce an associated deliverable you need to question why the task is included), project status reporting (the sample status report is excellent, except for one glaring omission discussed below), and the focus on quality assurance and configuration management metrics, which encompasses factors that are frequently missing from IT project controls.The project status report example is a highlight of this book. Mr. Murch's proposed format will provide a succinct summary of a project's health, and give the project manager, his or her team and the sponsor an ongoing view of the project's status. What mars this otherwise perfect format is an integrated view of cost and schedule performance is completely missing from the picture. He comes close by discussing estimate at completion vs. budget in the project cost performance of the report format, but does not connect it to the schedule performance. A true best practice is to compute a schedule performance index (Budgeted Cost of Work Performed divided by Budgeted Cost of Work Scheduled), and a cost performance index (Budgeted Cost of Work Performed divided by Actual Cost of Work Performed). These link schedule and cost performance and show a true picture of the project's health. I hope this gets rectified in the next edition of this excellent book.Every chapter of this book contains at least one or more gems that will make you a better project manager. I think every IT project manager should have a copy close by. We should applaud Mr. Murch's efforts for successfully cataloging and documenting these IT project management best practices. Despite the incomplete picture his project status report gives this book deserves 5 stars.

Important new work - Quality and Value

This is an important new work on project management that is written is refreshing new way that gives the reader new perspectives on the problems of managing projects. Murch has found a way to stimulate his readers. The book continually draws you in and is so interesting - - among the topics are history, team building, team retention ( a very important topic) project reporting and skills development. All this is achieved in the first section.In the next section Murch details a complete Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC) down to the task level, suggesting best practices - very few books have ever done this. This alone justifies the price and value of this book.In the techniques section, he reviews necessary project management methods such as Rapid Application ( RAD ), problem management, risk management, PM methodologies, (another very important topic) and other topicsIn conclusion as a seasoned and battle scarred Project Manager - this book will be read by my team(s) and other members of my organization.It will not leave my desk - excellent --- full kudos to Mr. Murch.

Hits the nail on the head . . .

Much of what is written about project management misses the whole point. When managing a "project", you are simply managing people. All the metrics and project management software in the world will not make a successful project. It's the efforts, motivation and skill of the people involved that yield success. Mr. Murch's project management approach begins with people - understanding the necessary skills for the PM, clearly defining project team roles, devoting an entire chapter to team motivation and retention, exploring ways to involve and empower end users. The metrics and methodologies are presented as well, with case studies that clarify and emphasize important points. The book also covers the tricky topics of problem management, risk management and crisis management. I also found the sections on configuration management and release management beneficial. This is project management presented by someone who's lived it in the trenches and truly has "best practices" to share with other professionals and students of the field.

Highly Recommended

This well written book with incisive text and the author expresses a sense of excitement and optimism about IT Project Management that pervades throughout. The book is broad in its coverage but hits the bulls eye for content,accuracy and quality. The book is particularly strong in the first parts which includes an excellent chapter on the History of Project Management and team building and retention practices.In section two there is a detailed description of a Software Development Project Lifecycle and well-illustrated description of the tasks and milestones, deliverables. The sections on techniques is well balanced and highly informative with Chapters on Rapid Application Development (RAD),Risk management and others.This is an important new book in the highly competitive field of Project Management and it comes highly recommended.
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