Mindful Project Management

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A01=Elmar Kutsch
A01=Mark Hall
adaptive leadership strategies
agile
Aleatoric Uncertainty
Author_Elmar Kutsch
Author_Mark Hall
behavioural risk analysis
Category=KJC
Category=KJMP
cognitive biases in projects
complex systems resilience
Critical Uncertainties
Defensive Retreat
Epistemic Uncertainty
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Eric Brown
False Consensus Effect
Hindsight Bias
horizon
human factors in project uncertainty
Hyperbolic Discounting
leader
Maginot Line
management
manager
Mindful Practices
Observational Selection Bias
optimism
Optimism Bias
Organisational Resilience
Overconfidence Effect
probabilistic approaches
probabilistic processes
project management
Project Resilience
resilient performance
risk
Risk Horizon
Scenario Planning
scenario-based planning
Sedan Sector
Status Quo Bias
team
teams
tiger
Tiger Team
TTP Labtech
UK Government Centre
UK Insurer
uncertainty management
Unshared Information
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367200916
  • Weight: 640g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Jun 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Central to the issue of improving project performance is the application of deterministic, probabilistic processes, and techniques to reduce human error. To that end, we as project managers often endeavour to implement and follow a project management methodology in the belief that we can reduce the scope for emerging ambiguous requirements, ill-matched resource needs and availability, contractual and funding constraints, and other unwanted uncertainties. However, such ‘self-evidently correct’ processes are not without their limitations.

The management of uncertainty needs to be viewed not from a procedural, ‘stand-alone’ perspective but from a behavioural, people-driven perspective – that is, Mindfulness. Mindfulness is a project-wide human capability to anticipate key events from emerging trends, constantly adapt to change, and rapidly bounce back from adversity. Resilient project managers are forward-thinking and able to foresee relevant scenarios that are likely to occur and which may have damaging effects on performance. We strive to be prepared for the best but also for the worst, and learning is nurtured and encouraged. We believe that with purpose, whatever uncertainty hits us, and regardless of the damage caused, we can prevent a crisis from happening in the first place. When a crisis occurs, we can recover and bounce back from shocks, quickly restoring ‘normal’ management.

This book goes beyond commonly accepted standards in project management and looks past mere compliance to determinism and probabilistic approaches to managing uncertainty. Relying on the power of mindful thinking, it identifies an art to manage uncertainty.

Elmar Kutsch is Associate Professor in Risk Management, Cranfield School of Management. Previously, he held a variety of commercial and senior management positions within the Information Technology (IT) industry. As a passionate skydiver and former project manager, his interests, both privately and professionally, revolve around the management of risk and uncertainty. Mark Hall is Senior Lecturer in Project and Operations Management and Director of the MBA Programme in Birmingham Business School at the University of Birmingham. Previously, he worked at the Universities of Bristol and Bath. Before becoming an academic, Mark worked in the UK and internationally for several years as a surveyor and project manager.

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