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E-grāmata: Convergence of Project Management and Knowledge Management

  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Nov-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Scarecrow Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780810876989
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  • Formāts: EPUB+DRM
  • Izdošanas datums: 16-Nov-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Scarecrow Press
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780810876989
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Knowledge is power, but this is especially true for teams carrying out a project. As in other arenas, the effective use of knowledge is possible only if it is readily accessible, well organized, properly analyzed, and competently disseminated to meet the project needs. Knowledge gained from project failures or successes is vital for the long term sustainability of organizations to compete in the business environment. This book focuses on the proper access and delivery methods for explicit knowledge in projects and also concentrates on tacit knowledge unknown and unavailable to most people in project environments. Every project is unique with start and end dates, detailed project plan, budget, schedule, human resources, and deliverables, and all these areas have a high volume of rich knowledge. Knowledge is created and flows through all nine project knowledge areas: Project Integration Management; Project Scope Management; Project Time Management; Project Cost Management; Project Quality Management; Project Human Resources Management; Project Communications Management; Project Risk Management; and Project Procurement Management. This book discusses the benefits of managing knowledge in projects and provides techniques that will increase the rate of return on projects. Addressing strategy and deployment issues, this volume also provides case studies, making this an invaluable tool for the success of projects and sustainability/growth of organizations.
Preface v
Acknowledgments vii
The Road Map to the Book ix
Companies and Organizations Mentioned in
Chapters
xix
Part I Introduction
1 Convergence of Project Management and Knowledge Management: an Overview
3(20)
Suliman Hawamdeh
T. Kanti Srikantaiah
Michael E. D. Koenig
Part II Deployment Issues
2 Gatekeepers, Boundary Spanners, and Social Network Analysis: Creating the Project Team
23(8)
Michael E. D. Koenig
3 The Role of Knowledge Management in Requirements Management
31(26)
Stephanie M. White
4 The Use of KM Tools and Techniques to Reduce Coordination Problems in Project Management
57(14)
Miguel A. Morales-Arroyo
Yun-Ke Chang
Gabriel de las Nievas Sanchez-Guerrero
5 Success Factors for Knowledge Management in a Strategy Project
71(10)
Siegfried Neubauer
Franz Barachini
6 Project-Based Knowledge Management: Improving Productivity for Knowledge Professionals on Single-Time Efforts
81(15)
Charles A Tryon
Suliman Hawamdeh
7 A Time-Based Model of Collaboration for Knowledge Management and Project Management
96(26)
Deborah E. Swain
8 Preliminary Research Context for Investigating the Use of Wikis as Knowledge Management Tools to Project Management-Based Initiatives
122(23)
Michael J. D. Sutton
Part III Strategy Issues
9 KM in Projects: Methodology and Experience
145(29)
A. Latha
J. K. Suresh
Kavi Mahesh
10 Knowledge Organization and the Project Management Process
174(10)
Joseph Kasten
11 Managing Knowledge in Projects: An Overview
184(23)
T. Kanti Srikantaiah
12 Aligning Knowledge Strategy with Project Characteristics
207(11)
Joseph Kasten
13 The Role of Organizational Storytelling in Successful Project Management
218(13)
Kate Marek
14 Friended, Tweeted, Posted: Social Sharing for Project and Knowledge Management
231(16)
Kyle M. L. Jones
Michael Stephens
Part IV Case Studies
15 Constructing Business-Oriented Knowledge Organization Systems (BOKOS)
247(8)
Denise A. D. Bedford
16 Leveraging Information and Knowledge Assets for Project Work: The World Bank Project Profile Pilot
255(18)
Ana Flavia Fonseca
Arnoldo Fonseca
17 Knowledge Management at Infosys: An Assessment
273(24)
T. Kanti Srikantaiah
18 Knowledge Management in Software Service Projects Ecosystem: A Perot Systems Case Study
297(11)
C. S. Shobha
Bhanu Kiran Potta
19 KM and PM: Case Studies and Learnings from the Infotech Sector
308(11)
Madanmohan Rao
Index 319(14)
About the Contributors 333
T. Kanti Srikantaiah is professor at Dominican University, where he is the Director of the Center for Knowledge Management.

Michael E. D. Koenig is professor and former and founding dean of the College of Information and Computer Science at Long Island University.

Suliman Hawamdeh is professor and program coordinator of the Master of Science in Knowledge Management at the University of Oklahoma.