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| Project Management: A Managerial Approach | 
enlarge | Authors: Jack R. Meredith, Samuel J., Jr. Mantel Publisher: Wiley Category: Book
Buy New: $95.00
Buy New/Used from $70.00
Avg. Customer Rating:   (36 reviews) Sales Rank: 220129
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Edition: 6 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 688 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.2 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 7.4 x 1.2
ISBN: 0471715379 Dewey Decimal Number: 658.404 EAN: 9780471715375 ASIN: 0471715379
Publication Date: December 6, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
  Disappointing for a Seasoned PM April 25, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Leave this book in the academic community. Ignore it in the real world PM office. This book puts greater emphasis on academic PM babble than it does on real world project management necessities. As such, the book de-emphasises many important points that are necessary to run a project in the real world. The critical path method in this book suffers from an -off by one- error. Check the PMBOK (2000) for verification. The authors made many references to the work of others which made the book twice as long as it could have been. No one had time to read any of the references that appeared to be interesting with hope of finding actual usable and valuable information. There was only passing references of risk, the importance of communication, personalities, and schedule disruption. There was nothing on these subjects that would assist a PM in the real world. Disappointingly, this book only used 1/3 of a chapter for Earned Value. It put minimal emphasis on EV other than to provide the equations. EV is very important in the PM world.
The chapter on Project Termination was good. - The rest of the book was disappointing.
This book should be used for academic PM introductory purposes only.
Sorry for the disappoint review but I was disappointed.
  "Project Management A Managerial Approach" adds depth and perspective to commercial construction management April 8, 2008 Commerical construction project management frequently focuses on repetition of very similar projects. Approaches and patterns of execution for new projects are frequently selected without consideration of changed conditions or new possibilities. " Project management" adds thought provoking new material that assists a broader perspective.
In the case studies, there were many examples from the manufactoring sector, and the examples in the service sector tended to have at least some relation to the " brick and mortar" world. This made the discussions of the subjects of budgeting and cost estimating, scheduling, and resource allocations both relavant to commercial building project management, and different enough to provide a new point of view. A helpful departure from many project management books that center on IT.
JF McCarthy Pareto BI publishing Choosing Project Success - A Guide for Building Professionals
  Suffices, but expect to supplement April 1, 2008 This book does not use enough detail to explain some of the concepts that turned out to be important in the class I was using it for. A prime example is its treatment of Earned Value Analysis, in which it is not made clear how some numbers are reached (PV, for example). Further, it really seems to be just a very expensive M$ Project manual. If you can avoid this book, do so.
  Absolutely worth reading February 9, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I purchased this book for a graduate level course as recommended by the professor. It really gives you a good and sufficient insight with a great amount of detail in projects managers' tasks and duties along with case studies. I recommend this to any one who's interested in learning more about Project Manager.
  Great summary, I got all my interview questions answered. I should have read this book before the interview. January 20, 2008 I bought this book to learn more about project schedule estimate. I am very satisfied with the book and spent the whole 2 weeks reading the whole book.
I would look into taking some class in project management or even an MBA, but this book gave me very good fundamentals in my new job.
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