Ishikawa Diagramming
A graphic technique, (also known as fishbone diagrams, herringbone diagrams, cause-and-effect diagrams, or Ishikawa) is used for displaying characteristics of a given situation or problem.
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A graphic technique, (also known as fishbone diagrams, herringbone diagrams, cause-and-effect diagrams, or Ishikawa) is used for displaying characteristics of a given situation or problem.
What is an Executive Summary Report?
Culture shock
The attitude of the project manager plays a pivotal role on any project as it will affect the communication with the team and the client as well.
Some managers spend too much time finding other team members to blame in order not to put themselves on the line. Blaming someone else might sound great to many but they will end up with no one else to blame except themselves because by blaming others, you give up your power to grow and change.
Change Management Process
Community Guide of the PMI-ACP|Community Guide of the PMI-ACP Adaptive Planning|Adaptive Planning
A technique used to identify the conditions that initiate the occurrence of an undesired activity or state. Once the root causes are identified, steps to eliminate them can be determined. The result of this technique can be summarized using Ishikawa Diagrams. The key to applying the technique is to take problems expressed by the customers (not perceived problems) and determine if the statement sounds like an effect, a problem, or a cause. Remedies should be aimed at the root causes and not the problems or the effects.
Overview
Tips for the schedule management:
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"If only God would give me some clear sign! Like making a large deposit in my name at a Swiss bank." - Woody Allen |