Moving From Project Management To Project Leadership


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Moving from Project Management to Project Leadership


Moving from Project Management to Project Leadership

Author: R. Camper Bull

language: en

Publisher: CRC Press

Release Date: 2010-04-29


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Imagine if we were using the same medical techniques today that were used during the Industrial Revolution, including the practice of bloodletting using leeches. Medicine has come a long way since then. So why do organizations and corporations cling to management techniques that are just as obsolete as the bleed-and-leech model? In a global workpla

Moving from Project Management to Project Leadership


Moving from Project Management to Project Leadership

Author: R. Camper Bull

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 2011


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Over the past few years, the project management industry has become excellent at dissecting what needs to be done to run a project. As with all industries, project management has matured, and higher standards have been set. In reaction to these additional requirements and greater complexities, project managers have reverted to the more traditional way of doing things by trying to break them down into smaller and smaller segments that can be distributed to less-trained team members for the execution of the work. This paper discusses a shift in ideas that has created a tremendous industry and jobs for thousands of people. It begins by exploring the formation of the Project Management Institute and the development of A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide). It then calls for a change in the way projects are looked at, how they are developed, and encourage project managers. This requires a new set of skills. It explores one of the great challenges in the project management industry. Project managers are distracted by the ability to create simple checklists instead of taking the harder route--the less traveled route of understanding the team and developing a process by which we can succeed through other projects.

Leading Quietly


Leading Quietly

Author: Joseph Badaracco

language: en

Publisher: Harvard Business Press

Release Date: 2002


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Most of us think of leaders as courageous risk takers, orchestrators of major events-in a word, heroes. Yet while such figures are inspiring and admirable, Harvard Business School Professor Joseph Badaracco argues that their larger-than-life accomplishments are simply not what makes the world work. What does, he says, is the sum of millions of small yet consequential decisions that men and women working far from the limelight make every day: how a line worker for a pharmaceutical company responds when he discovers a defect in a product's safety seal; how a manager deals with a valued employee suspected of stealing; how a trader handles a transaction error that will cost a client money. Badaracco calls them "quiet leaders"-people who choose responsible, behind-the-scenes action over public heroism to resolve tough leadership challenges. These individuals don't fit the stereotype of the bold and gutsy leader, and they don't want to. What they want is to do the "right thing" for their organizations, their coworkers, and themselves-but inconspicuously and without casualties. They do so by being baldly realistic about the complexities of their own motives and those of the dilemmas they face. In today's fast and fluid business world, nothing is as it seems. And they know it. Drawing from a four-year study of quiet leadership, Badaracco presents eight practical and counterintuitive guidelines for confronting situations in which right and wrong seem like moving targets. Grounding each strategy in an engaging story, he shows how these "non-heroes" succeed by managing their political capital, buying themselves time, bending the rules, and more. From leaders in the executive suite to aspiring leaders in the office cubicle, Leading Quietly compellingly shows how patient, everyday efforts can add up to a better company and even a better world. Joseph L. Badaracco Jr. is a Professor at Harvard Business School, the Chair of the M.B.A. Elective Curriculum, and the author of Defining Moments: When Managers Must Choose between Right and Right (ISBN 0875848036, HBS Press, 1997).