Establish processes that ensure the success of your project managers - and increase the profitability of your products and services With The Handbook of Program Management, you'll obtain the skills to incorporate new technology and people into your processes while delivering improved products and services that continually outpace your competition.In light of the Project Management Institute's new certification program for program managers, (PgMPSM) it's crucial that you have the understanding and processes necessary to deliver projects on schedule, within target costs, and that meet customer expectations.Program and project management authority Dr. James Brown helps you create the necessary culture that will ensure the success of your project managers and teams by providing the must have insights you would only get from a trusted mentor, The price of delayed decision-making How calculated failure can drive organizational change. Why your best people often make the biggest mistakes. What the customer really needs to know (and not know). The essence of successful execution
This is a great book! I have to admit that skipped a few chapters on topics I'm extremely familiar with, but I still feel confident in saying the book provides a great overview of program management. It doesn't go deep, but it lightly touches on all of the important aspects of the role.
My only complaint is that there was little to no focus on program management for people without any direct reports - much of the focus was for PMs that have project managers working under them. This is a very broad view and I understand why Brown took it, but a little more detail on PM without direct reports would have been appreciated.
The chapters on communicating with stakeholders, team building, and risk management were my favorites as that's where I gleaned the most information, but overall it's a solid guide for PM basics that I would recommend to anyone starting out or looking to improve on bad habits.
Mr Brown manages, in epic form, to translate a part of his knowledge into 239ish pages of jam packed information for the program manager. Also every page has something powerful on it and this is a book I will reread over and over again as I make my way into the PM world.
What sets this book apart is that you can feel Mr. Brown's experience on every page. While there are many great lessons in this book (the part on meetings and buy-in are worth the price of admission) the big theme of the book is simple. Listen. Always listen. Don't let tools or second hand knowledge rule you. Get down and talk to people. Understand your organization, understand what makes your co-workers tick. From this, all his other points take off.
And what an amazing amounts of points. He doesn't dig too deep; you may need a primer on product management (or, if you've been in the trenches as long as me, you may have gathered this knowledge via osmosis). From dealing with your stakeholder, to software, to Agile, to building teams, to work load; Mr Brown runs the gamut.
If you are a program manager, or want to be one, or want to know what they do - this is an excellent place to look.
No-nonsense, practical guide to Program Management
Over the past 3 months, I have read several books on Program Management. Most focused on the PgMP standard, were theoretical, and read like textbooks. This work, by contrast, has commonsense, practical advice for Program Managers and was fun to read. Multiple times I thought to myself - yes, I can use day-to-day on the job.
Contains a serie of tip of advises for new program managers. However, most of the book is recommenations which applies to portafolio, program or project managers. Usually, a new program manager was before a project manager so concepts are clear.
The most I expected of that book was how steps I should take to deal with a program effectively, but not much of that information is presented.
I got more practical guidance from this book than any of the other Project Management books in our collection. For me the most useful chapters are: >Stakeholder Management -hugely helpful in anticipating cultural push back, especially the suggestion to "look for the Unofficial People of Influence." >Program Execution Processes -Rolling Wave Scheduling and the stricture to "Maintain Integrity with Change Control" helped me prepare my managers for needed process improvements (without making it sound like; "You're a bunch of knuckleheads.") > Program Communication Processes -was tremendously helpful even though my desire for a "Team Charter" was placated and buried.
I'm transitioning to a program management type role at work. I had never heard of program management until the position was mentioned to me in relation to my move, so this was a tremendous first resource.
I basically had three thoughts while reading: I would've never thought of that in a million years; How did I not think of that?; I'm already doing that!
This book is not of the professional management strand that does more cheerleading than teaching. There were parts that I felt like were written especially for others, and then some that were directed at me. I underlined on almost every page, and this will remain at work with me for a while.
A must-read for program managers, and a beneficial read for anyone in a management position. There are some good tidbits such as "Kill what's ugly while it's young," as well as advice about consistency, defining expectations, etc.