Annika Tidstrm
The Nature of Projects 
 Project Management  
Department of Management 
Faculty of Business Studies 
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Agenda 
1. The history of projects & project management   
2. Projects  so what? 
3. The art of project management 
4. Project life cycle 
5. Organizing projects 
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1. The history of projects and 
project managment 
University of Vaasa | Department of Management  
Project Management 
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University of Vaasa | Department of Management | 
Project Management 
From pyramids to business 
environments 
We are not sure what was the first project in the history however since from the beginning there are still similarities 
how the projects are carried out. Research about project management is a pretty new field. First scientific article 
came out in 50s.Most of the scientific work has been done within the project management field in 80s and 90s. It is 
a very new field altough projects have existed for ages.
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
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Time  Project characteristics 
~ 2650 B.C.   Construction, lasted for a long time 
500-1500 A.D.  Construction, aesthetic values, long 
time 
15th to 17th century  Time & contracts 
1960  CPM, PERT 
1970  Organization, leadership, teams 
1980  Models & computerized solutions 
1990  Multi-projects, processes 
2000  Creativity & learning, strategic 
perspectives of projects 
Present  Projects as parts of the business 
environment 
(Artto et al. 2011) 
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2. Projects  so what? 
University of Vaasa | Department of Management  
Project Management 
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
A project 
 a unique activity that adds value, expends resources, has 
beginning and end dates, and has constraints and requirements 
that include scope, cost, schedule performance, resources, and 
value. (Vaidyanathan, 2013)  
... the application of knowledge, skills, tools and techniques to 
project activities in order to meet stakeholders needs and 
expectations from a project. (PMBOK)  
... the process of integrating everything that needs to be done as 
the project evolves through its life cycle in order to meet the 
projects objectives. (Peter Morris)  
... the process of guiding a project from its beginning through its 
performance to its closure. Project management requires 
planning, organizing, and controlling.  
(Portny et al. 2008)  
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
 a unique set of processes consisting of coordinated and 
controlled activities with start and finish dates, undertaken to 
achieve an objective. Achievement of the project objective requires 
deliverables confirming to specific requirements, including 
multiple constraints such as time, cost and resources.  
(ISO 21 500)  
A project is a unique entity formed of complex and interrelated 
activities, having a predefined goal that must be completed by a 
specific time, within a budget, and according to specification. 
(Artto et al. 2011)  
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Characteristics 
A temporary organization 
Unique and non-repetitive 
A work structure and interrelated activities 
A start and finish 
A life-cycle 
Limited by time, cost and scope 
The outcome may be tangible or intangible   
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Types of projects 
1. Projects delivering value-added solutions to 
external customers 
2. Projects developing solutions for the companys 
own business 
3. Investment project 
4. Delivery project 
5. Research project 
6. Development project 
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2. The art of project 
management 
University of Vaasa | Department of Management  
Project Management 
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Project management 
 project management is the act of collaborating with people 
using other required resources such that a project is planned, 
organized and controlled effectively to accomplish its goals and 
objectives. (Vaidyanathan, 2013)  
... the application of knowledge, skills, tools and techniques to 
project activities in order to meet stakeholders needs and 
expectations from a project. (PMBOK)  
... the process of integrating everything that needs to b done as the 
project evolves through its life cycle in order to meet the 
projects objectives. (Peter Morris)  
... the process of guiding a project from its beginning through its 
performance to its closure. Project management requires 
planning, organizing, and controlling.  
(Portny et al. 2008)    
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
 the application of methods and tools, techniques and 
competences to a project. Project management includes the 
integration of the various phases of the project life cycle. Project 
management is accomplished through processes. (ISO 21500)  
Project management is the application of management practices 
aimed at achieving the project goal and objectives. (Artto et al. 
2011, p. 25) 
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Managing a project 
- Identifying requirements 
- Addressing the needs, concerns and expectations 
of stakeholders 
- Setting up, maintaining and carrying out 
communications among stakeholders 
- Managing stakeholders towards the goal of the 
project 
- Balancing the competing project constraints (time, 
scope and cost) 
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Three perspectives on project 
management (Artto et al. 2011) 
- Project management as: 
- Knowledge areas and processes 
- Competences and characteristics 
- Tools and communication 
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4. Project life cycle 
University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Definition 
 Project lifecycle refers to the chain of phases in 
which the ideas, expectations, and opportunities for 
a project are identified; the project is executed; and 
the benefits resulting from the use of the project 
product are gained and product use is supported.  
(Artto et al. 2011, p. 35) 
The process 
Conceptualization  Planning 
Implementation 
Control 
Closing 
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Project Management 
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Phase 1: CONCEPTUALIZATION 
 Identify need 
 Gather data 
 Establish: goals, basic economics, stakeholders, risk level, 
strategy, potential team 
 Guesstimate resources 
 Identify alternatives 
 A preliminary project plan 
 Appoint project team 
 Present proposal 
 Obtain approval for next phase 
Phase 2: PLANNING 
 Develop scope baseline: end product(s), quality standards, 
resources, activities 
 Establish: master plan, budget, cash flow, WBS, policies 
and procedures 
 Obtain approval to proceed 
Phase 3: IMPLEMENTING 
 Establish work packages, detailed schedule, information 
control systems 
 Procure goods and services 
 Execute work packages 
Phase 4: CONTROL  
 Direct/monitor/forecast/control scope, quality, cost and 
time 
 Compare performance with specifications 
 Reporting 
 Change management  
Phase 4: CLOSING  
 Finalize product(s) 
 Review and accept 
 Transfer product responsibility 
 Evaluate project 
 Document results 
 Release/redirect resources 
 Reassign project team 
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5. Organizing projects 
University of Vaasa | Department of Management  
Project Management 
A. Pure project organizations 
 Companies are structured by grouping peopel into project 
teams on temporary assignments 
 Each project is a self-contained business unit 
 The project manager has sole control over resources 
Board of directors 
Project board A 
Project manager A 
Project board B  Project board C 
Project manager B 
Project manager C 
Contractors (bought in as needed) 
Strengths and weaknesses of project 
structures 
STRENGTH  WEAKNESSES  
 Assigns authority solely to 
the project manager 
 Promotes effective and fast 
decision making 
 Flexible labour force 
 Encourages rapid response 
to market opportunities 
 Weak commitment to a 
projects success. 
 It may be difficult to get 
the human resources 
needed 
 Concern among project 
team members about 
the future once the 
project ends. 
B. Matrix organizations 
 Companies are structured by creating a dual hierarchy in 
which functions and projects have equal prominence 
 Suitable when 
 There is a pressure to share scarce resources across project opportunities 
 There is a need to emphasize two or more different types of output 
 The environment of the organization is complex and dynamic 
General manager 
VP  
Marketing 
VP  
Operations 
VP  
Finance 
VP  
R&D 
VP 
Engineering 
PM 1 
PM 2 
Staff P1  Staff P1  Staff P1 
Staff P1  Staff P1 
Staff P2  Staff P2 
Staff P2  Staff P2 
Staff P2 
STRENGTHS  WEAKNESESS  
 Suited to dynamic 
environments 
 Emphasizes the dual 
importance of project 
management and functional 
efficiency 
 Promotes coordination 
accross functional units 
 Maximizes scarce resources 
between competing project 
and functional responsibilites 
 Two bosses 
 Difficult to share or split 
resources 
 Long-term projects tend to 
erase the line organization 
 Lessons-learned may not 
be reported to new 
projects 
Strengths and weaknesses of matrix 
structures 
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Project Management 
Projects should be a part of 
the organizations strategy 
- Portfolio management 
- Different strategies require different project 
structures 
- Cost leadership  flexible structure that takes 
advantage of economies of scale 
- Differentiation  flexible structure with highly 
qualified expert resources   
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University of Vaasa | Deparment of Management | 
Project Management 
Project Management Office 
- The PMO is the department or group that defines 
and maintains the standards of the process related 
to project management within the company 
- Assits PMs and project teams 
- General support 
- Training 
- Software tools 
- Project control 
- Standardizes and maintains project management 
knowledge