The sixth edition of An Introduction to Project Management has been completely updated to follow the Project Management Institute's PMBOK® Guide – Sixth Edition (2017). It includes several new figures, a new section on the PMI talent triangle and the importance of leadership skills, and a new section on an agile approach to project planning. New research, statistics, and real-world examples are included throughout the book. It also incorporates updated information and screenshots from several software tools. Continuing features include a chapter for each process group and a comprehensive case study to illustrate applying tools and techniques throughout the project life cycle. Each chapter includes several real-world examples and references, including opening cases and case wrap-ups, examples of what went right, what went wrong, media snapshots, best practices, and video highlights in each chapter. End of chapter materials include chapter summaries, quick quizzes, discussion questions, and exercises with case studies provided in Appendix C. The free student website includes over fifty template files, online quizzes, data files for Microsoft Project, and much more. A comprehensive, secure instructor site is available with lecture slides, solution files, test banks, etc.
I loved this book because I learnt more about Project Management just by reading it than I did by sitting in my classes. It's very informative and is written in a very neat format. I have to read the PMBOK Guide to know how relevant and resourceful this book is. But for a book this fat, on a subject that's not very interesting, there must be something in it that kept me hooked.
But the author needs to either lower the price of the book or stop coming up with newer editions. Every single student hated spending $80 after it.
I purchased and read this book due to my interest in Management, and specially Project Management. And what a great decision it was! I learned so much from this book, the author employs a very direct aproach to the subjects covered, but doesn't leave any subject unexplained. All the matters in the book are very well explained, sometimes with small examples to help assimilate the concepts. Adding to that, the author made a very fortunate decision to add a project example that stretches troughout the whole book, using that project example to further explain all the stages of Project Management. That project example wasn't really needed to understand all the topics of the book, as they are quite well explained, but it gives the reader a different sight, by watching those concepts being applied to a 'real project'. I learned a great deal with this book, and if I ever get to a position in Project Management, it will surely be my reference book.
An Introduction to Project Management was my best friend during my first PM course I took in 2017. It explains very well the basic concepts of Project Management. I highly recommend this book only as a support to your class.