プロジェクトの実現可能性:脆弱箇所の発見ツール<br>Project Feasibility : Tools for Uncovering Points of Vulnerability

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プロジェクトの実現可能性:脆弱箇所の発見ツール
Project Feasibility : Tools for Uncovering Points of Vulnerability

  • 著者名:Mesly, Olivier
  • 価格 ¥10,535 (本体¥9,578)
  • CRC Press(2017/06/01発売)
  • ポイント 95pt (実際に付与されるポイントはご注文内容確認画面でご確認下さい)
  • 言語:ENG
  • ISBN:9781498757911
  • eISBN:9781315295237

ファイル: /

Description

This book presents a set of tools that will aid in deciding whether a project should go ahead, be improved, or abandoned altogether by pinpointing its vulnerabilities. It offers a review of project feasibility analysis, and more critically, psychodynamic aspects that are often neglected, including how stakeholders interact. It provides a complement to the common techniques used for analyzing technical, financial, and marketing feasibility. The goal is to identify "hidden truths" and eliminate those gray areas that jeopardize the success of a given project. The focus is on uncovering points of vulnerabilities in four key aspects of a project: People, Power, Processes, and Plan.

Table of Contents

Preface

Biography

Foreword

CHAPTER 1: Introduction and the Notion of Points of Vulnerability

1.1 A brief history

1.2 Points of vulnerability- a preview

1.3 Overview

1.4 A few tips

1.5 Testimonial

CHAPTER 2: Defining Project Feasibility vs. Vulnerability

2.1 Introduction

2.2 Definition of a project according to the PMBOK

2.3 Towards a more precise definition

2.4 Impacts

2.5 Documentation and information

2.6 Project as a whole

2.7 Where does the project come from?

2.8 Definition of Project Feasibility

2.9 Project as a system

2.10 Examples of consulting firms

2.11 Conclusion

2.12 Checklist

2.13 Testimonial

CHAPTER 3: Defining Prefeasibility vs. Vulnerability

3.1 Introduction

3.2 Definition of prefeasibility

3.3 Components of a prefeasibility study

3.4 Notes

3.5 A few tips

3.6 Case of a motor oil-filtering vase

3.7 Three scenarios (system ORP)

3.8 The importance of measuring scales

3.9 Conclusion

3.10 Checklist

3.11 Testimonial

CHAPTER 4: Cost, Calendar and Challenges (The 4 P’s)

4.1 Introduction

4.2 Types of feasibility

4.3 Main aspects of a feasibility study

4.4 Request for a feasibility study

4.5 Proposed structure of a feasibility study

4.6 Bermuda Triangle

4.7 Calendar

4.8 Links between stages/phases

4.9 Costs

4.10 Challenges

4.11 Summary of a partial OPT-ORP study

4.12 Bermuda Triangle revisited (summative)

4.13 Framing and comparing information

4.14 Conclusion

4.15 A few tips

4.16 Checklist

4.17 Testimonial

CHAPTER 5: Modeling Vulnerability

5.1 Introduction

5.2 Psychodynamic modeling

5.3 Applied to processes

5.4 Observables

5.5 Bubbles and Arrows

5.6 Finding points of vulnerability

5.7 The mathematics of stakeholders’ interactions

5.7.1 R and T

5.8 Conclusion

5.9 A few tips

5.10 Checklist

5.11 Testimonial

CHAPTER 6: People and Power

6.1 Introduction

6.2 Contemporary context of teams of project management

6.3 People

6.4 Functional groups

6.5 Dysfunctional groups (conflicts)

6.5.1 Interpersonal competencies

6.5.2 Project sequence with respect to interpersonal competencies

6.5.3 Trust

6.5.4 Cooperation

6.5.5 Observables

6.5.6 Model of interpersonal competencies

6.5.7 Conclusion

6.5.8 Checklist

6.5.9 Testimonial

6.6 Power

6.7 Measure of Power and chain of authority

6.7.1 Leadership

6.7.2 Organization and structure of authority

6.8 KSF and KFF

6.9 Conclusion

6.10 A few tips

6.11 Checklist

6.12 Testimonial

CHAPTER 7: Processes and Plan

7.1 Introduction

7.2 Processes

7.3 Processes Analysis: dynamic systems, GANTT, PERT and CPM

7.4 Magic moments (critical)

7.4.1 Point of no-return

7.4.2 Point of autonomy

7.4.3 Final point of delivery

7.5 7.4.4 Bottlenecks

7.4.5 Costs vs. magic moments

7.6 Control processes

7.7 Points of vulnerability

7.8 Plan (goal)

7.8.1 Mission

7.9 Conclusion

7.10 A few tips

7.11 Checklist

7.12 Testimonial

CHAPTER 8: Operating Margin and Decision-Making

8.1 Introduction

8.2 Complexity

8.3 Decision-making

8.3.1 Analysis by comparative tables

8.3.2 Analysis by product trees

8.3.3 Multicriteria analysis

8.3.4 Analysis by decision tree

8.3.5 Analysis of cause to effect

8.3.6 Sensibility analysis

8.3.7 Critical path analysis

8.3.8 Risk probability analysis

8.3.9 CAPM model applied to decision-making

8.3. 10 The neuroscience of decision-making

8.3.10 Simulation analysis

8.3.11 Optimal path analysis

8.3.12 Summary of types of analyses

8.4 Key performance indicators (KPI)

8.5 Conclusion

8.6 A few tips

8.7 Checklist

8.8 Testimonial

CHAPTER 9: Measuring Value

9.1 Introduction

9.2 Notion of risk vs. points of vulnerability

9.3 Risk probability

9.4 Quality

9.5 Notion of value

9.6 Analysis of value

9.7 Success and failure

9.8 Revised definition of a project

9.9 Conclusion

9.10 A few tips

9.11 Checklist

CHAPTER 10: General Conclusion

Annex A Prefeasibility study

Annex B Feasibility study

Annex C Brief overview of scientific articles

Annex D Table of conceptual modeling

Annex E Examples of applied psychodynamic modeling to production processes

Annex F Questionnaire on interpersonnel compétences

Bibliography

Glossary