Project Excellence Baseline for Achieving Excellence in Projects and Programmes


Book Description

What defines whether a project or programme is “good” or “bad”? When we’re striving for excellence in the execution of our projects and programmes, what do we mean? IPMA has given its extended definition in the PEB, the Project Excellence Baseline. This model is based on the well-known EFQM model, but is adapted to the field of project- and programme management and after over 10 years of use has been adapted to the model we’re using now.Table of Content: Foreword Executive summary Table of Contents 11 List of figures 14 List of tables 15 Abbreviations and acronyms 16 Terms and definitions 17 1. Introduction 21 1. 1. IPMA PEB links to IPMA OCB and IPMA ICB 24 2. Purposes and intended users 27 2.1. Purpose of the IPMA Project Excellence Baseline 27 2.2. Typical user groups of the IPMA PEB 28 3. The project in its context 33 3.1. What is a project? 33 3.1.1. The project in an organization 33 3.1.2. The project as a temporary organization 34 3.1.3. Processes in a project 35 3.2. A project in its external context 36 3.3. A project in its organisational context 38 3.3.1. Organisational context 38 3.3.2. Project governance 38 3.3.3. The project in the context of a programme and portfolio 39 4. Introducing project excellence 43 4.1. The concept of excellence 43 4.2. The concept of project excellence 44 4.3. Continuous improvement as a foundation for excellence 45 4.4. The role of sustainability 47 4.5. The role of leadership 50 4.6. The link between competence and excellence 51 5. Introduction to the Project Excellence Model 55 5.1. Principles behind the model design 55 5.2. Structure of the model 56 5.3. Areas of the model and interpretation of the overall results 57 5.4. Interactions between the areas of the model 60 5.5. Business value delivery using IPMA PEM 61 5.6. The model criteria 62 6. Assessment of project excellence 71 6.1. Purposes and approaches to the project excellence Assessment 71 6.2. Assessment of project excellence in a project life cycle 75 6.3. Scope of the assessment in projects, programmes and portfolios 77 6.4. The role and competences of project excellence assessors 82 6.5. The assessment process 84 6.6. Scoring approach 86 Annex A: Description of the Project Excellence Model 91 A. People & Purpose 92 B. Processes & Resources 102 C. Project Results 107 Annex B: Scoring tables for the IPMA Project Excellence Model 117 Scoring table for People & Purpose and Processes & Resources areas 118 Scoring table for Customer, Project Team and Other Stakeholder Satisfaction criteria 119 Scoring table for Project Results criteria 120 Annex C: The IPMA Global Project Excellence Award assessment and its benefits 121 The IPMA Global Project Excellence Award assessment 122 The IPMA Global Project Excellence Award benefits 125 References 127




Project Excellence Baseline for Achieving Excellence in Projects and Programmes


Book Description

What defines whether a project or programme is “good” or “bad”? When we’re striving for excellence in the execution of our projects and programmes, what do we mean? IPMA has given its extended definition in the PEB, the Project Excellence Baseline. This model is based on the well-known EFQM model, but is adapted to the field of project- and programme management and after over 10 years of use has been adapted to the model we’re using now.Table of Content: Foreword Executive summary Table of Contents 11 List of figures 14 List of tables 15 Abbreviations and acronyms 16 Terms and definitions 17 1. Introduction 21 1. 1. IPMA PEB links to IPMA OCB and IPMA ICB 24 2. Purposes and intended users 27 2.1. Purpose of the IPMA Project Excellence Baseline 27 2.2. Typical user groups of the IPMA PEB 28 3. The project in its context 33 3.1. What is a project? 33 3.1.1. The project in an organization 33 3.1.2. The project as a temporary organization 34 3.1.3. Processes in a project 35 3.2. A project in its external context 36 3.3. A project in its organisational context 38 3.3.1. Organisational context 38 3.3.2. Project governance 38 3.3.3. The project in the context of a programme and portfolio 39 4. Introducing project excellence 43 4.1. The concept of excellence 43 4.2. The concept of project excellence 44 4.3. Continuous improvement as a foundation for excellence 45 4.4. The role of sustainability 47 4.5. The role of leadership 50 4.6. The link between competence and excellence 51 5. Introduction to the Project Excellence Model 55 5.1. Principles behind the model design 55 5.2. Structure of the model 56 5.3. Areas of the model and interpretation of the overall results 57 5.4. Interactions between the areas of the model 60 5.5. Business value delivery using IPMA PEM 61 5.6. The model criteria 62 6. Assessment of project excellence 71 6.1. Purposes and approaches to the project excellence Assessment 71 6.2. Assessment of project excellence in a project life cycle 75 6.3. Scope of the assessment in projects, programmes and portfolios 77 6.4. The role and competences of project excellence assessors 82 6.5. The assessment process 84 6.6. Scoring approach 86 Annex A: Description of the Project Excellence Model 91 A. People & Purpose 92 B. Processes & Resources 102 C. Project Results 107 Annex B: Scoring tables for the IPMA Project Excellence Model 117 Scoring table for People & Purpose and Processes & Resources areas 118 Scoring table for Customer, Project Team and Other Stakeholder Satisfaction criteria 119 Scoring table for Project Results criteria 120 Annex C: The IPMA Global Project Excellence Award assessment and its benefits 121 The IPMA Global Project Excellence Award assessment 122 The IPMA Global Project Excellence Award benefits 125 References 127




Organisational Competence Baseline for Developing Competence in Managing by Projects


Book Description

What defines whether a project or programme is “good” or “bad”? When we’re striving for excellence in the execution of our projects and programmes, what do we mean? IPMA has given its extended definition in the PEB, the Project Excellence Baseline. This model is based on the well-known EFQM model, but is adapted to the field of project- and programme management and after over 10 years of use has been adapted to the model we’re using now. Foreword Executive summary Table of Contents List of figures List of tables Abbreviations and Acronyms Terms & Definitions 1. Introduction 2. Purpose and intended users 3. The organisational view of projects 3.1. Challenges for organisations in managing projects 3.2. An organisation in its context 3.3. From mission, vision and strategy to results 3.4. Projects, programmes and portfolios as means for results 4. Organisational competence in managing projects 4.1. Concept of organisational competence 4.2. Concept of organisational competence in managing projects 40 5. Groupings, competence elements and interactions 5.1. Grouping of competence elements 5.2. Overview of competence elements 5.3. Interactions of competence elements




Project Management by ICB4 - IPMA


Book Description

IPMA observes an increasing number and importance of projects in business, public and people’s lives, also known as ‘projectification’. In the world of globalisation, an increasing number of organisations are working project-based to cope with the challenges of modern times. Especially now, society is on the brink of such significant changes as global warming and artificial intelligence. Projects drive the development of new products and services, expansions, new capabilities, implementation of new strategies and new generations of infrastructure, and major maintenance and upgrade of existing facilities and infrastructure. This book provides a knowledge base for developing individual competencies for managing projects as described in the IPMA Individual Competence Baseline version 4, which encompasses: - Perspective competencies - People competencies - Practice competencies As projects become increasingly important, we must continue to realise that projects begin and end with people and that their competent performance within the broader context of the environment is at the heart of any successful project. In this book, theories and practices for all ICB4 competencies are described. They are logically sequenced, explained and enriched with practical approaches, which can be learned and applied in the daily project management practice. As such, it aligns entirely with IPMA's vision: to strengthen competence across society to enable a world in which all projects succeed. This book also supports obtaining an IPMA certificate as proof of your competence in projects.




Better Practices of Project Management Based on IPMA competences – 4th revised edition


Book Description

This is the revised edition of the first text book in English specially developed for training for IPMA-D and IPMA-C exams, now based on Version 4 of the ICB. In this 4th edition, the text has been restructured and extended to align with the structure and scope of the competence elements in the ICB version 4, divided into Practice competences, People competences and Perspective competences. Therefore, this book will be essential guidance and study book for everyone studying for the IPMA-D, IPMA-C and IPMA-B exams. Besides that, it is an extremely rich source book for those project managers that have committed themselves to a lifelong professional development. In addition, the book had to be applicable to groups of project managers originating from diverse cultures. For this reason, this is not a book that tells how a Westerner must behave in an Arab or an Asian country, but one that looks at the different subjects covered in the ICB, as seen from diverse cultural standpoints. Each chapter is based on the same structure: Key concepts, Introduction, Actions that lead to competence development, Self-assessment, Special topics, Assignments. Text boxes, additional to the main text, give additional explanation to the main text. An elaborate Index of terms allows that this book can be used as a highly up-to-date information source to all aspects of project management. Next to that all, a web-site is available with videos, discussion fora on specific topics, and the opportunity to discuss with the author.




Viable Project Business


Book Description

This book develops best practices for collaboration between teams within large organizations, and demonstrates how an optimal environment for teamwork can improve business processes. To do so, it analyzes the system dynamics of living organisms and applies the results to the business environment. The book employs a consistent approach, applying recent advances in molecular biology to the structure and design of large industrial organizations. These insights from molecular biology are used to define the requirements for a practicable business management system based on the ISO 9000 criteria. The outcome is a viable and feasible system that can be used to design large organizations, e.g. by manufacturers of industrial equipment. In addition, four case studies are used to show how such a biologically inspired system can be implemented to positively and significantly impact business.




Developing Organizational Maturity for Effective Project Management


Book Description

Despite criticism for their serious shortcomings, maturity models are widely used within organizations. The appropriate applications of these models can lead to organizational and corporate success. Developing Organizational Maturity for Effective Project Management is a critical scholarly publication that explores the successes and failures of maturity models and how they can be applied competently to leadership within corporations. Featuring coverage on a wide array of topics such as project management maturity, agile maturity, and organizational performance, this publication is geared toward professionals, managers, and students seeking current research on the application of maturity models to corporate success.




The 12 Pillars of Project Excellence


Book Description

Asking tough questions about the current state of project management, The 12 Pillars of Project Excellence: A Lean Approach to Improving Project Results provides groundbreaking techniques to achieve excellence in project leadership that can result in six sigma type results or failure-free projects. It unveils novel solutions and breakthrough concepts—including project culture analysis, the five powers of project leadership, the power of visualizationTM, the science of simplicityTM, dynamic risk leadership, and dynamic project failures analysis—to help you chart the most efficient path to the pinnacle of project leadership. Winner of a 2013 Axiom Business Book Award The author provides the cutting-edge methods based on decades of personal practical experience, valuable lessons learned, and authoritative insights gained from leading over 300 projects to successful conclusions. Complete with powerful tools for organizational- and self-assessment on the accompanying CD, this book will not only transform your approach to project management, but will also provide you with the tools to develop effective leaders and consistently achieve exceptional business results. Some Praise for the Book: ... a highly pragmatic guide to project management. ... lays out the way of thinking that underpins success... a book that everyone could benefit from. —Mikel J. Harry, Ph.D., co-creator of Six Sigma provides the most significant contribution for leaders to mitigate project risks, assure sustainable growth, and guarantee survival... . —Carlos Alberto Briganti, general manager of Eaton Europe and Japan, 2001-2003; vice president of Eaton South America 2004-2007 ... one of the BEST books I have ever read on project leadership. —John Salazar, CIO Department of Work Force Solutions; former CIO of Department of Taxation & Revenue, State of New Mexico ... a comprehensive guide that will assist any business leader within an organization to consistently achieve excellent business results! A ‘must buy’—get it now! —Billy Billimoria, director, customer applications, BAE Systems; program director, Lockheed Martin; project engineer, Space Shuttle and Support Equipment Design




Research on Project, Programme and Portfolio Management


Book Description

This volume brings together selected and extended papers representative of work presented at the 8th IPMA Research Conference, which was held online between 9th and 11th September 2020. It explores the topics of project, programme and portfolio management, and self-organizing in and through projects. Offering international and multidisciplinary perspectives, this book answers questions such as: What is the impact of self-organization on organizational structures, processes, cultures and leadership? How can we define the transformative power of self-organization? What is the motivation of individuals to perform activities, to engage with others and organizations in order to get things done? Which kinds of leadership best support self-organizing in projects? What have disciplines like natural science, psychology, philosophy, sociology and management to offer in this respect? What are the cultural limitations and potentials regarding self-organization in projects and how do we deal with them? Research on Project, Programme and Portfolio Management is a valuable resource for all researchers and project management professionals interested in autonomous working and self-organizing.




The Programme and Portfolio Workout


Book Description

Implementing change is needed in every business. But how do you get started and ensure you actually realize the benefits you need? How do you direct and manage the tens, hundreds, or even thousands, of projects and the other pieces of work your business is undertaking? How do you make sure everyone is working towards the same goals? Building on five previous editions of The Project Workout, this book focusses on programme and portfolio management. It is a valuable companion for every business executive and programme manager as well as a comprehensive resource for students of business, portfolio and programme management. The Programme and Portfolio Workout provides practical advice and techniques to direct and manage your business in a structured, yet agile, way. Aimed at both business and programme managers, it takes you through different approaches to portfolio, programme and project management and shows you how they can work together. The practical approach is enhanced throughout with a series of ‘Workouts’: exercises, techniques and checklists to help you put the book’s advice into practice. The Workouts are supported by an on-line resource of tools. This expanded edition contains a wealth of new material on the governance and management of portfolio and programmes, including how to work with standards and methods, such as GovS 002, ISO 21504, BS6079 and MSP. The companion to this book, The Project Workout, deals with directing and managing individual projects. It uses the same concepts and approaches so that you know, when directing your portfolio or programme, that your project sponsors and managers are taking the same approach. Together, these books give you what you need to ensure your organization succeeds.