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The Project in the Organizational Structure

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Will there be layoffs. Rusty skills. Comments on Pure Project ... Team members more concerned with finishing job than doing good job ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Project in the Organizational Structure


1
Chapter 5
  • The Project in the Organizational Structure

2
Project Growth
  • Need for speed, market responsiveness, and
    product flexibility
  • Need for broader areas of knowledge in developing
    new products and services
  • Rapid expansion of technology
  • Management inability to understand and control
    large numbers of activities

3
Switching to Project Environment
  • Is difficult and time consuming
  • Requires the full commitment of upper management
  • Generally causes a lot of concern among
    employees
  • As a result, organizations may have multiple
    structures

4
Organizational Issues Related to Projects
  • How to tie project to parent firm
  • How to organize the project
  • How to organize activities common to multiple
    projects

5
Traditional Forms of Organization
  • Functional
  • Pure project
  • Matrix
  • Mixed

6
The Project as Part of the Functional Organization
  • Organization is divided into functional sub-units
  • Integration between sub-units handled by rules,
    procedures
  • Management chain handles problems
  • Works well in stable environment

7
Including Project In Traditional Forms
Figure 5-1
8
Advantages
  • Flexible use of staff
  • Experts assigned to functional units
  • Assigned to projects as needed
  • Staff can easily be assigned to multiple projects
  • Experts can be switched between projects easily
  • Functional manager picks best expert for each
    project

9
Advantages Continued
  • Specialists can share knowledge and experience
  • Functional units provide technological/knowledge
    continuity
  • Also provide continuity of policies and
    procedures
  • Functional manager can train and inspect

10
Advantages Continued
  • Functional areas provide for a career path within
    a knowledge area
  • Engineers can become supervisors or VPs
  • Does not require movement into project management
    to advance

11
Disadvantages
  • Client is not the focus
  • Function unit has its own work outside the
    project
  • Functional manager not likely to be accountable
    for project and therefore client
  • Functional units not focused on project
  • Function unit sees success in its area as most
    important
  • Project seen as secondary, or worse, an
    interruption

12
Disadvantages Continued
  • Project manager may not have adequate authority
  • Must share authority with functional managers
  • May be several managers responsible for various
    parts of project
  • Client may not have a single point of contact at
    project
  • This can make response to the client slow or
    non-existent

13
Disadvantages Continued
  • Slow response
  • Functional managers manage their part to benefit
    their functional unit
  • Interests outside their area may not be fully
    considered
  • Tendency to sub optimize
  • Complex projects require input from a large
    number of different areas
  • This can be difficult to coordinate without a
    common manager

14
Disadvantages Continued
  • Motivation is weak
  • Project is not the workers home
  • Project manager most likely does not do their
    performance evaluations
  • May not receive additional pay for difficulties
    of working on project

15
Pure Project Organization
Figure 5-2
16
Advantages
  • Project manager has full authority
  • Will typically report to senior management
    (project sponsor)
  • This gives project manager access to managerial
    advice
  • This centralizes authority and makes for rapid
    decision making / response to client

17
Advantages Continued
  • Everyone reports to the project manager
  • This gives the project manager the ability to
    make quick decisions
  • Makes it easier for project manager to motivate
    and reward members
  • May be tempered by relationship to functional
    unit
  • Shorter communications lines

18
Advantages Continued
  • Can maintain project management skills
  • Project managers can move from project to project
  • It pays to hire, train, and promote skilled
    project managers
  • Project team has its own identity
  • Project members work for the project not the
    functional unit
  • This can significantly improve performance

19
Advantages Continued
  • Quick decisions
  • Authority is centralized
  • Unity of command
  • Each worker reports to one, and-only-one, manager
  • Project has a simple structure

20
Advantages Continued
  • Structurally simple and flexible
  • Easy to implement
  • Holistic approach
  • Everyone on project is concerned about project,
    not their functional unit

21
Disadvantages
  • Duplicate staffing
  • Each project has a full staff
  • This leads to overstaffing
  • Stockpiling
  • Project managers tend to stockpile resources so
    they are available when needed
  • They also tend to keep those resources longer
    than needed just-in-case

22
Disadvantages Continued
  • Experts falling behind in other areas
  • Experts on a project will focus on the areas
    essential to the project
  • This can lead to them falling behind in other
    areas
  • It can also be difficult to feed their developing
    expertise back into the organization

23
Disadvantages Continued
  • Organizational inconsistency
  • Corner-cutting
  • They dont understand our problems
  • Life of its own
  • Projectitis
  • Us versus them

24
Disadvantages Continued
  • Life after the project ends
  • Lots of uncertainty
  • Will there be layoffs
  • Rusty skills

25
Comments on Pure Project
  • Only way to do large, one-time projects
  • Disadvantages make it impractical for continually
    doing projects, e.g. construction
  • Matrix developed in aerospace to deal with this

26
The Matrix Organization
Figure 5-3
27
The Matrix Organization Continued
  • Functional part provides home for workers after
    project
  • Functional part helps maintain expertise
  • In a strong matrix, people from functional areas
    are assigned to project
  • In a weak matrix, capacity from functional areas
    are assigned to project

28
Advantages
  • The project is the focus
  • That remains the project managers responsibility
  • The project has access to entire organization for
    labor and technology
  • Projects draw from functional organizations as
    required
  • This reduces duplication of resources

29
Advantages Continued
  • Less anxiety about the end of the project
  • Project members return to their functional
    organizations
  • Response to client is rapid
  • That remains the project managers responsibility
  • With much remaining within parent organization,
    response to parent is also rapid

30
Advantages Continued
  • Consistent policies
  • Parent organization will oversee project
  • Project will have closer access to parent
    administration
  • Easier to balance organizational resources
  • Less competition for resources
  • Competition can be controlled by parent
    organization and functional managers

31
Advantages Continued
  • Flexibility
  • Many different possible structures between strong
    and weak
  • Different structures can be used for different
    projects
  • Different structures can be used for different
    functional areas

32
Disadvantages
  • Functional units make many decisions, including
    technology ones
  • Project manager has less control than in a pure
    project
  • Project managers control is balanced against
    that of the functional manager
  • If they disagree, it can be hard to resolve
  • Negotiation is the key to project success

33
Disadvantages Continued
  • Projects compete for resources
  • This is especially true when there are several
    large projects
  • Someone above project managers must set and
    enforce priorities
  • Multiple schedules will add stress to functional
    managers

34
Disadvantages Continued
  • Strong matrices mirror many disadvantages of
    project structure
  • People are assigned to, and identify with,
    their project much as in the project structure
  • Workers do not have a single manager
  • This splits loyalty
  • Makes performance appraisal difficult
  • Information flow is difficult

35
Virtual Projects
  • Project team crosses time, space, organizational,
    or cultural boundaries
  • Facilitated by the Internet
  • Often organized as a matrix

36
Virtual Project Rules
  • Challenging and interesting projects
  • Use volunteers
  • Use people who know each other
  • Create a resource to learn about one another
  • Encourage frequent communications
  • Divide work into modules

37
Mixed Organizational Systems
Figure 5-4
38
Choosing an Organizational Form
  • Firms typically do not set out to pick an
    organizational form
  • Rather, the structure evolves over time
  • The structure is not static
  • Rather, it changes as the organization, its
    goals, and its environment changes

39
Functional Form Best for
  • In-depth application of a technology
  • Large capital investment, especially when that
    investment is concentrated in one functional area

40
Project Form Best for
  • Handling a large number of similar projects
  • Handling a one-time project that requires much
    control but is not focused on one functional area

41
Matrix Form Best for
  • Projects that require inputs from several
    functional areas
  • Projects that use technology from several
    functional areas

42
Two Special Cases
  • Risk Management
  • The Project Office

43
Risk Management
  • Projects are risky, uncertainty is high
  • Project manager must manage this risk
  • This is called risk management
  • Risk varies widely between projects
  • Risk also varies widely between organizations
  • Risk management should be built on the results of
    prior projects

44
Parts to Risk Management
  • Risk management planning
  • Risk identification
  • Qualitative risk analysis
  • Quantitative risk analysis
  • Risk response planning
  • Risk monitoring and control
  • Risk management database

45
Risk Identification
  • List ways a project can fail
  • Evaluate severity
  • Estimate likelihood
  • Estimate the ability to detect
  • Find the risk priority number
  • Consider ways to reduce

46
The Project Office
  • All projects should have an office dedicated to
    that project
  • Often called the war room
  • In addition to providing a place to work, this
    helps built a feeling of team among the workers

47
The Project Team
  • Different project need different staffs
  • Some common members include
  • Engineer
  • Contract administrator
  • Controller
  • Should report to project manager

48
Human Factors and the Project Team
  • All projects are composed of inter-connected
    groups
  • These groups can form teams
  • It is not enough to have an effective team
  • The team must also be working towards the good of
    the project
  • Need to avoid us versus them mentality

49
Human Factors Continued
  • Some of the problems that prevent a team from
    performing effectively
  • Internal conflict
  • Member frustration
  • Wasting time
  • Poor decision making
  • Team members more concerned with finishing job
    than doing good job
  • Project teams need to work together
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