Successful project management requires organization, skill, and a systematic approach to ensure that projects are delivered on time, and on budget. Idiot's Project Management, 6th Edition is updated to reflect all of the latest project management methodologies for anyone who is looking to avoid the chaos that can ensue if project leaders don't possess the necessary understanding of the right principles and practices. Readers of this new edition will benefit newly added sample PMP prep exam questions at the end of each chapter, as well as newly organized, updated content that aligns with the knowledge areas as the PMI (Project Management Institute) defines them.
The book covers the 5th Edition of the PMBOK (Project Management Body of Knowledge).
Despite the connotation of the title, I find these types of Idiot's Guide books extremely helpful whenever approaching a new topic I am completely unfamiliar with.
I picked up this book to help familiarize me with the world of project management since that topic is the focus of my development plan at work these days. This book gives an overview from the inception of a project to closing it down along with all of the steps in between. The writing style of the author was not in an academic manner and easy to understand as long as one takes the time internalize the specialized vocabulary introduced throughout the book.
Now that I have finished reading this book, am I ready to lead a project? Absolutely not. Would I feel comfortable enough to assist a project manager on a medium sized project and not be completely lost? Sure. Did this book make the daylong project management class I took at work a lot easier to comprehend? You bet.
This book gives a great summary of why project management is important and the need to use it. While there are aspects of the how to execute the various phases of a project, this part of the book could have been much more robust to help people feel more confident in using these skills. A key resource that would have made this book better would have been to have access to templates that could be used in the planning stages of project management and some deeper insights in how to use them effectively.
Ugh! So much to slosh through. I read it as a top-tier NAPO recommended book. There must be multiple other books on project management that are vastly better than this one especially for POs that will not be running projects as elaborate as this book “guides.”
Book that, with a very suggestive name, presents the basic concepts of project management, focusing mainly into the "non project managers" public.
Livro que, com um nome bastante sugestivo, apresenta os conceitos básicos de gerenciamento de projetos, focando principalmente o público de "não gerentes de projeto".