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The Role of Project Managers
By Tony Jacowski
The tasks to be handled by a project manager to successfully manage a project include:
- Integration Management - This is developing and managing the direction of the project
- Scope Management - This includes planning, defining and managing the scope of the project.
- Time and Cost Management - This covers developing a schedule, allocating resources and managing funds for the project.
- Quality Management - This involves taking care of the
quality of the process in question such that it meets or even exceeds
various quality parameters set earlier.
- Human Resource Management - A manager needs to take care of his team, encourage and motivate them and make sure the team moves in the right direction.
- Communication Management - The manager needs to prepare a
communication plan and make sure that there is a healthy communication,
both horizontally and vertically.
- Risk Management - Various risks involved in a project should
be identified and a mitigation and contingency plan needs to be
developed to ensure that the project is not derailed at any point.
- Procurement Management - Various materials needed during the
project need to be procured and managed with the vendors and suppliers
for successful completion of the project.
A project manager is usually responsible for the success or the
failure of the project. They first need to define the project and then
build its work plan. If the scope of the project is not very clear, or
the project is executing poorly, the manager is held accountable.
However, this does not mean that the manager does all the work by
himself (which is practically impossible). There is an entire team
under the project manager, which helps to achieve all the objectives of
the project. However, if something goes wrong, the project manager is
ultimately accountable.
Apart from this, depending on the size and the complexity of the
project, they may need to take on multiple roles. The project manager
may need to assist with gathering business requirements, help to design
a database management system or may prepare project documentation. They
may work full time on a large project, or may work part-time on various
projects of a smaller nature; or may alternatively handle various
projects as well as handle other responsibilities like business
analysis and business development.
At times, they may have accountability but not authority. For
example, he or she may be using certain resources but might not have
direct control over those resources. At such times, the manager might
find certain limitations over task execution, which might not take
place as they might have liked. Not having direct control over the
state of finances and finance allocation might cause ambiguity.
In order to be successful, the project manager must be given support and authority by senior management.
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