Project Management

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Titanic: A Failed Project?

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Marcelo Silva Niterói, Rj, Brazil
It is usually said that Titanic project was a total failure in terms of Project Management. But it was really so?

I mean Titanic was a big success in terms of media attraction, marketing, selling of tickets, too much attention from the local population; it amazed and at the same made people pride of themselves.

I was delivered as the greateast travel ship ever built in the entire world until that time. And yes it was delivered as promised! On time! It departed from a port!

Did the fact that one crew member was distracted and was unable to see from far and therefore could not take necessary measures to avoid the actual hit with an iceberg turn this giant piece of engineering work a failed project? Wasn't it a human failure instead of a project failure?

Think about it!
Mr. Marcelo Silva
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Eric Simms Senior Program Manager Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Nov 05, 2019 3:04 PM
Replying to Kiron Bondale
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How about the decision to have fewer lifeboats than could have accommodated all the folks onboard and other similar cost cutting measures which went into the requirements & design?
I'd have to say the project was still a success, from the PM's point of view. The requirements weren't the most humane, but stakeholders (owners, investors, etc.) made the final decision regarding those. Even marketing the Titanic as 'unsinkable' was out of the PM's control (and was probably the rationale the stakeholders used to justify the dearth of lifesaving measures).
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1 reply by Marcelo Silva
Nov 05, 2019 4:01 PM
Marcelo Silva
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Perfect reply !!!
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Marcelo Silva Niterói, Rj, Brazil
Hello Kiron,

Wasn’t it a client requirement?

It’s crystal clear that they’ve decided to give the upper hand to the rich over the poors. In others the life boats was designed for the rich ONLY.

It seem it was a CLIENT DEMAND!!
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Marcelo Silva Niterói, Rj, Brazil
Nov 05, 2019 2:57 PM
Replying to Ed Tsyitee Jr
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The Titanic was a successful project. The use of the doors were a failure in implementation, as Jack can attest to. There was room for two Rose!
Yes Ed according to Pmbok it was in the implementation group of process
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Eduard Hernandez
Community Champion
Product Operations Program Manager Barcelona, Cataluña, Spain
Nov 05, 2019 3:04 PM
Replying to Kiron Bondale
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How about the decision to have fewer lifeboats than could have accommodated all the folks onboard and other similar cost cutting measures which went into the requirements & design?
Perhaps the PM was a fervent agilist and said "Look, to sail the ship by this date, we can't deliver all lifeboats, maybe just half". And the product owner..."OK, let's do it".

Joking aside, the project was a succes, the ship's design likely not.
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2 replies by Eric Simms and Marcelo Silva
Nov 05, 2019 4:06 PM
Marcelo Silva
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After all you have to be agile ???? ‘Let’s them kill themselves for the boats and let’s go to the next one the ship will never sink anyway’ ??????

Guys let’s respect our scrum masters friends. HaHa
Nov 05, 2019 11:57 PM
Eric Simms
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You raise a good point about the Titanic being an Agile project. Perhaps the Product Owner thought the ship was suitable for a simple voyage across the Atlantic and back, and a few more sprints were planned to finish upgrading the Titanic's safety features when it returned to Belfast.
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Marcelo Silva Niterói, Rj, Brazil
Nov 05, 2019 3:34 PM
Replying to Eric Simms
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I'd have to say the project was still a success, from the PM's point of view. The requirements weren't the most humane, but stakeholders (owners, investors, etc.) made the final decision regarding those. Even marketing the Titanic as 'unsinkable' was out of the PM's control (and was probably the rationale the stakeholders used to justify the dearth of lifesaving measures).
Perfect reply !!!
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Marcelo Silva Niterói, Rj, Brazil
Nov 05, 2019 3:57 PM
Replying to Eduard Hernandez
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Perhaps the PM was a fervent agilist and said "Look, to sail the ship by this date, we can't deliver all lifeboats, maybe just half". And the product owner..."OK, let's do it".

Joking aside, the project was a succes, the ship's design likely not.
After all you have to be agile ???? ‘Let’s them kill themselves for the boats and let’s go to the next one the ship will never sink anyway’ ??????

Guys let’s respect our scrum masters friends. HaHa
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Eric Simms Senior Program Manager Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Nov 05, 2019 3:57 PM
Replying to Eduard Hernandez
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Perhaps the PM was a fervent agilist and said "Look, to sail the ship by this date, we can't deliver all lifeboats, maybe just half". And the product owner..."OK, let's do it".

Joking aside, the project was a succes, the ship's design likely not.
You raise a good point about the Titanic being an Agile project. Perhaps the Product Owner thought the ship was suitable for a simple voyage across the Atlantic and back, and a few more sprints were planned to finish upgrading the Titanic's safety features when it returned to Belfast.
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1 reply by Marcelo Silva
Nov 06, 2019 11:09 AM
Marcelo Silva
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Good point.
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Sergio Luis Conte Helping to create solutions for everyone| Worldwide based Organizations Buenos Aires, Argentina
To decide if Titanic was a failed project or not we need to know the project goals and objectives.
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2 replies by Marcelo Silva
Nov 06, 2019 11:12 AM
Marcelo Silva
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It is all there on the movie haha ... just kidding
Nov 06, 2019 11:15 AM
Marcelo Silva
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PO does not like papers Sergio in general.
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Marcelo Silva Niterói, Rj, Brazil
Nov 05, 2019 11:57 PM
Replying to Eric Simms
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You raise a good point about the Titanic being an Agile project. Perhaps the Product Owner thought the ship was suitable for a simple voyage across the Atlantic and back, and a few more sprints were planned to finish upgrading the Titanic's safety features when it returned to Belfast.
Good point.
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Marcelo Silva Niterói, Rj, Brazil
Nov 06, 2019 4:04 AM
Replying to Sergio Luis Conte
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To decide if Titanic was a failed project or not we need to know the project goals and objectives.
It is all there on the movie haha ... just kidding
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