Project Management

Please login or join to subscribe to this thread

Is project management on its way out?

linkedin twitter facebook  
avatar
David Schlatter Sr Systems Analyst| RGA Batavia, NY, United States
CIOs recommend ditching project management - https://www.itweb.co.za/content/rxP3jMBpDR8vA2ye

Is the concept of having IT projects, with start and end dates, becoming obsolete? Does focusing on product development and value streams mean that, in some areas, projects as we have come to know them will no longer be done? I do NOT think this a yes or no type question, but may lead to some subtle differences in how projects are managed. Especially if the idea of value stream funding versus project funding gets more traction ...
Sort By:
< 1 2 >
avatar
Rami Kaibni
Community Champion
Senior Projects Manager | Field & Marten Associates New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada
Sep 13, 2018 10:43 AM
Replying to Aaron Porter
...
From a Product perspective, there is a lot of work done by development teams that is a combination of new features and support/maintenance of existing code. In recent efforts around tracking time, it was brought up that releases include both project and maintenance work (which we knew), and that some of the web developer managers don't expect their teams to know the difference (which we did not expect). Other platforms have a more marked distinction between projects and maintenance.

My guess is that companies aren't getting rid of functions performed by project managers, they're just changing how the work is organized and who does it.

Just like Agile has not eliminated waterfall and project managers have not all become scrum masters, not all project managers will be replaced by product managers. Company culture and how (whether or not?) employees are empowered has a strong impact on how work is performed. Some companies will be able to embrace a product and value stream focus. Others will not.

Is there a new PMI credential coming???
There might be another coming related to Agile, I am not sure though.
avatar
James Lovell Project Manager| Mercy Technology Services Ballwin, Mo, United States
Thanks for sharing the article and perspective David. The article seems to be pointing at waterfall project management, and for many environments that is not responsive enough. Fortunately, project methodology is just a tool in the project management toolkit. Agile/Scrum works nicely with a product-focused environment.
< 1 2 >

Please login or join to reply

Content ID:
ADVERTISEMENTS

"Nothing defines humans better than their willingness to do irrational things in the pursuit of phenomenally unlikely payoffs."

- Scott Adams

ADVERTISEMENT

Sponsors