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3: Project Phases and Organization

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    24646
    • Anonymous
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    • 3.1: Project Phases
      This page discusses the four main phases of a project based on PMI guidelines: initiation, planning, execution, and closeout. Initiation involves team formation and scope definition, while planning develops detailed schedules and budgets. Execution focuses on actual project work, and closeout finalizes tasks and ownership transfer. Each phase demands specific skills and resources, especially for complex projects.
    • 3.2: Project Organization
      This page outlines essential project management functions, emphasizing the lack of a universal approach while considering factors like complexity and culture. It details roles such as project sponsors and managers, and the significance of tailored procurement strategies. The text discusses different procurement relationships, quality management, and the responsibilities of key roles in coordinating resources.
    • 3.3: Using the Darnall-Preston Complexity Index to Measure Organizational Complexity
      This page explains how to analyze project functions and assign complexity scores using the Darnall-Preston Complexity Index (DPCI™), which assesses size, organizational complexity, technological newness, and technology familiarity on a scale of 1 to 5. It offers criteria for scoring and illustrative scenarios for varying complexity levels, aiming to achieve accurate complexity estimation while acknowledging some assessment ambiguity.
    • 3.4: Exercises
      This page includes chapter-end exercises designed to improve understanding and retention. Key topics involve evaluating the advantages and disadvantages of expanding a CEO's span of control at Fiat-Chrysler and comparing the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator with the DPCI framework for project evaluation. Discussion prompts focus on collaborative responsibilities between controls and procurement managers and detail project phases, especially those scoring low on the Darnall-Preston Complexity Index.
    • 3.5: Web Exercise
      This page outlines a learning objective focused on locating, downloading, and analyzing a scope statement template from Virginia. It includes step-by-step instructions for downloading the template, completing it with the user's name, capturing screenshots, and compiling the documents. Users are instructed to evaluate their submissions based on specific criteria and to save and submit their completed documents as directed.


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