ABSTRACT

The role of project sponsor is critical in large projects during the development of the business case, for governance and assurance and as the person who decides that the project should continue or close at any stage. Yet in many organizations the skills of the sponsor are often assumed; he or she will be a senior manager who may well have no practical project experience at all. David West explains the roles and skills that lie at the heart of effective sponsorship. The sponsor acts as a lynch-pin between the Board and the Project Manager, communicating and translating requirements downwards and resource needs, progress and constraints back upwards. An over-zealous sponsor may be tempted to assume some of the project manager's responsibilities, whilst an ineffective sponsor may be invisible, leaving the project manager uninformed by, and unrepresented to, the Board. Project Sponsorship includes exercises, examples and case histories from the real world of projects. It is an essential guide for anyone assuming the important role of managing the business case of the project and will help you ensure that the organization is 'doing the right things' as well as 'doing things right'.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

PART 1 THE NATURE OF PROJECT SPONSORSHIP AND SPONSORS

part |2 pages

PART 2 CORE PROJECT SPONSOR DUTIES AND SKILLS

part |2 pages

PART 3 UNDERSTANDING PROJECT MANAGEMENT

chapter 11|14 pages

The Project Team

chapter 12|12 pages

Project Planning

chapter 13|6 pages

Progress Reporting

chapter 14|6 pages

Value Engineering

chapter 15|18 pages

Risk Management

chapter 16|6 pages

Quality Management

chapter 17|12 pages

Commercial Management

chapter 18|4 pages

Change Control

chapter 19|6 pages

Stakeholder Management