This results-oriented resource is a must-have strategic partner for project managers of every industry.
Shifting priorities, budget cuts, unexpected interruptions….the obstacles that project managers face daily are sometimes relentless and always burdensome. Now, the average project is only growing more complicated.
The Project Management Tool Kit is filled with step-by-step guidance that will enable managers to complete even the most complex projects both on time and on budget. The book also offers 100 powerful, practical tips and techniques in a variety of areas,
Scope planningSchedule development and adjustmentCost estimating and controlDefining and using project metricsDecision-making and problem solvingMotivation and leadershipStakeholder engagement and expectation managementRisk identification and monitoringExtensively updated and revised to reflect the latest changes to A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), the checklists, charts, examples, and tools for easy implementation in this invaluable resource will help project managers of all types tackle any challenge that comes their way.
TOM KENDRICK has over 35 years of project and program experience, including senior positions with Hewlett-Packard and Visa. He is a certified Project Management Professional (PMP®) and the author of several highly respected project management books, including Identifying and Managing Project Risk.
I thought this was a good top-level summary of all the core activities, processes, and tools needed to run a project. The content would have been better served being ordered by the logical groupings of the related sections, instead of alphabetically. I found myelf jumping all over the book to get to related content. I get the feeling this book could be converted almost directly into a really great set of hyperlinked pages on an internal project management wiki.
This is not a "learn project management" book. It is a collection of tools that project managers should have in their kit. And most of them are "common sense" to the average business school graduate. It does warn you of this in the introduction. But I did not find it helpful.
A lot of the tips in this book are quite useful if you're trying to understand how to best manage projects of different types. It' a good overview of what is available, and will enable anyone who reads this book to pick out the tools they find most useful in a specific type of project.
This book is a Project Managers' dictionary, much like the PMBOK or Harold Kerzner's "Project Management, A Systems Approach." Both of those books are more comprehensive. But this book has some processes defined for things like 'Showing Leadership,' 'Lobbying for Resources' and 'Exerting Influence.' Not to say that such activities are entirely process-driven, it is at least handy to have a checklist to refer to, just to make sure that one has the major bases covered, and one's head is in the game, before heading off to the meeting...