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Project Management
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Project management is the structured practice of planning, executing, and controlling a project from initiation to completion within defined constraints of scope, cost, and budget. It appears across business, engineering, construction, aviation, and operations management curricula because it addresses a universal organizational challenge: delivering results efficiently under real-world pressures. Students write about it to understand how organizations coordinate complex processes, allocate resources, and manage risk across industries ranging from oil and energy to retail operations and food service startups.

The papers in this collection reflect a wide range of approaches. Industry-specific case studies examine project management in construction, aviation, and the oil industry, exploring how sector demands shape planning and execution. Scenario-based analyses look at large-scale logistical challenges such as baggage handling system installation and emergency evacuation planning. Other papers take a historical or theoretical angle, tracing the development of project management as a discipline or applying frameworks like the theory of constraints to understand how bottlenecks affect outcomes. Business-focused pieces use real companies to analyze how project managers balance organizational, legal, social, and economic considerations simultaneously.

A strong essay on project management grounds its thesis in a specific context — an industry, a project phase, or a defined problem — rather than summarizing the field in general terms. Evidence drawn from concrete examples, such as measurable cost overruns, scope changes, or planning failures, carries more weight than abstract definitions. Connecting process decisions to outcomes is what separates strong analysis from basic description. The most common pitfall is treating project management as a checklist of steps; effective essays instead examine why certain planning or management decisions succeed or fail within a particular organizational environment.

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Paper Doctorate
IT Project Management: Challenges and Best Practices
Project management is an important activity that deals with organizing the tasks, processes, and activities involved in developing and implementing certain projects in various fields.
Paper Undergraduate
Value of diversity in the workplace
The development of new websites throughout the organization I work for is a complex process, both politically and from a technical standpoint as well. The complexity of this process is accentuated by the worldwide…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Project management strategies for starting a coffee shop
The following pages will focus on presenting the steps for starting a coffee shop an ensuring its successful functioning. The paper will successively present the steps required for starting the coffee shop, starting…
Paper Undergraduate
Manufacturing Management a Case Study
A Case Study From the Perspective of the Manufacturing Manager
Paper Doctorate
Learning outcomes and personal development reflections
Designing, conceptualizing, and computing the costs of production involved critical thinking at each step of the project. From the time we developed the idea of a garden ornament, we had envisioned our target market and…
Paper Doctorate
Future of project management
In many respects the evolution of project management parallels the development and continual validation of leadership theories, often corresponding to comparable timeframes. In the analysis presented in The Current State of Project Management Research: Trends, Interpretations, and Predictions (Kioppenborg, Opfer, 2002) the author has completed a meta analysis of the progression of product management as a discipline through several generations of thought leadership and research. This analysis will evaluate why the scholarly focus of study has shown the shift from a systems perspective to a leadership and organizational behavior one (Kioppenborg, Opfer, 2002). There has also been continual debate of whether project management is a social science or not, and if so if it bounded by the general theory of project management, the problem-driven or central paradigm perspective (Shenhar, Dvir, 2007). This analysis will evaluate these factors and define which paradigm fits best for project management in the context of social science.
Paper Undergraduate
Database Administration Today in Evaluating
In evaluating the current field of database administration, the areas of Database Management Systems (DBMS), Database Administrator (DBA) roles and responsibilities, the concepts of database designs, performance of…
Paper Doctorate
Windows XP to Windows 7
In today's world of technology, it is imperative that you stay current with what is new in the IT world. What makes this particularly challenging is the pace of change in IT systems, and the continual need to make sure they align to a department, division and in the case of the City of Elizabethtown, an entire city. Never before has it been more critical for government municipalities to get the most value possible out of their IT investments. With continual budget costs and an orientation to judge investments purely on short-term cost reduction, investments in IT must be seen as atypical and worthy of much greater focus and effort to integrate the into municipalities. This is to first increase the value delivered, second to ensure the hard-earned taxpayer funds used to buy and upgrade equipment, operating systems, networks and applications are put to the best possible use, and third, to make absolutely sure they deliver the greatest value necessary in order for the City of Elizabethtown to get the greatest value. Those are the foundational elements of this proposal and the values it is based on. As the migration of 250 workstations across 10 departments and 5 locations has a budget of $100,000 and the performance gains possible from transitioning their operating systems form Windows XP to Windows 7 is expected to be significant, the cornerstone of this proposal centers on delivering excellent public service ultimately to the citizens City of Elizabethtown. As Microsoft has also recently indicated they will be permanently discontinue Windows XP support on April 8, 2014 according to the Microsoft website, the urgency to get this upgrade completed accurately, completely, and with precision is clear. It seems like every six months something new is coming out. While it is true you do not need every new gadget out there to stay current in the IT world, you do need the most recent operating system to ensure the compatibility, security, scalability and long-term Return on Investment (ROI) of IT spending. I work for the City of Elizabethtown as the Network Administrator. While a Network Administrator's job is mostly configuring and maintaining servers, I also manage all the workstations and make sure they are getting the most recent updates that are on the WSUS (Windows Server Update Services) server. I am also in charge of preparing budgets for these workstations and purchasing them. I have been with the City now for 5 years and we have running Windows XP SP3 on all workstations. With all the new threats out there and with Microsoft ending their commitment to support Windows XP in 2014 I have decided to upgrade to Windows 7. The reason I have decided to go with Windows 7 instead on the upcoming release of Windows 8 is simply because Windows 7 was released 2 years ago and most of the bugs and kinks are gone and there is stability in the program. Microsoft has also been able to get much greater levels of software support for their 64-bit versions of the Windows 7 Application programmer Interface (API). The current Windows 32-bit based applications on the XP systems throughout the city will eventually become obsolete, some as early as twelve months from now in 2013. The message is clear from Microsoft however; they have made Win64 API-based development a strategic priority, investing heavily in Independent Software Vendor (ISV) relations efforts with their strategic partners. Microsoft has also modified and improved the device drivers for Win64-based systems so that the network security, speed and precision are also significantly enhanced. While Windows NT, XP and Windows 7 are all based on the Windows NT Kernel shown in Appendix 4, Microsoft has greatly expanded the Windows 7 kernel to support a more multiplatform-based strategy than ever before. The Windows 7 kernel can be seen in Appendix 3. Microsoft will make a major announcement later this year with Windows 8 support for the Windows Phone, and will also seek to bring the Win64 API to the Apple iPad via Apple iOS 6. This Apple operating system will most likely bring Microsoft Office to the Apple iPad. Current discussions with Microsoft indicate that any servers running Windows 7 components will be able to support non-Microsoft devices. As the City of Elizabethtown begins to adopt smartphones and tablet PCs including the Apple iPad with increasing regularity, the IT department will need to also consider the platform requirements for supporting these devices. This tend in IT is called Bring Your Own Device (BYOD). Departments in City Hall, the Elizabethtown Police Department, Fire Stations, Gas Department and Public Works all could significantly increase the effectiveness of their workflows by integrating smartphones and tablet PCs into their workflows in the future. While these are not core requirements of this transition from Windows XP to Windows 7, 64-bit edition, it is another consideration that needs to be kept in mind. The transition from XP to Windows 7 will enable our IT department to better serve the entire city in the future and set the foundation for eventual adoption of mobile devices. It is not a matter of whether this will happen, only a matter of when. Another aspect of the transition of the 250 workstations is the versioning of their applications and the significant potential speed increase they can attain when they are migrated form Win32 to Win64-based versions. This speed increase has, according to Microsoft and its ISVs (development partners) been as high as 60% on calculation-intensive applications including Microsoft Excel, SQL Server and other database applications. This speed increase is due to the result of applications using memory more efficiently and also having greater support for multithreading, which is literally the ability to have an application complete several concurrent, even potentially conflicting tasks, at once. The transition from Windows XP to Windows 7 will certainly require a hardware upgrade for workstations, and if the architecture of the workstation cannot support the minimum requirements of the operating system, another will need to be purchased. This is also the case with software licenses for all applications that are today running in Win16-based API Mode, by far the most prevalent and popular API that Microsoft has developers supporting. To see where the Win16 API fits into the architecture of these operating systems please see Appendix 4, Windows NT Kernel Architecture. An application written to support the Win16 API will also run in Windows XP, Windows 7 and 8. As the kernel architecture shows in Appendix 2, Win32 APIs dominate the XP framework. Fortunately Windows has designed in Win16 to Win32 API migration and compatibility, and is working to ensure applications written on both of these standards will work with Windows 7 and beyond. What all this means for the upgrade of systems is that the planning steps need to pay very close attention to standardizing on Win64-based applications to gain the full performance boost form upgrading the systems with hardware to make them capable of running Windows 7. The hardware upgrades and fine-tuning will only be as valuable as the operating system-level and most importantly, application-based upgrades completed. In conclusion the primary goal of upgrading the systems to avert obsolescence needs to be balanced with potential to significantly increase and improve speed over time.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Conflict management and corporate culture in organizations
One of the basic functions of management is leading. A good leader knows how to handle diverse members working in the organization. In fact, a good leader would always prefer diversity rather than homogeneity and take…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Leadership: Being an Effective Project
The many requirements placed on project managers require a unique skill set, all underscored by the ability to lead project teams and continually get results from diverse groups of professionals.