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It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager's Guide to Working with People on Projects (Practitioners)
 
 
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It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager's Guide to Working with People on Projects (Practitioners) [Hardcover]

Dwayne Phillips (Author), Roy O'Bryan (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

November 10, 2003 0471485861 978-0471485865 1
A common-sense guide to real-world project management

Common sense isn't always commonly practiced. Anyone who's ever worked on a project in a technical setting knows this. Indeed, much of working with others consists of solving unexpected problems and learning from mistakes along the way.

It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager's Guide to Working with People on Projects provides essential reading for project managers trying to understand the trials and triumphs that can arise in any project setting. The authors, both respected project managers with sixty years of experience between them, describe their own mistakes as well as the many valuable lessons they drew from them. Instead of trying to formulate these in abstract theory, Phillips and O’Bryan tell the stories surrounding a particular project, providing a more memorable, real-world, and practical set of examples.

Written in a distinctly nontechnical style, this is a general troubleshooting guide for people who work on projects together. As such, its content proves useful in many different settings and applies to many different kinds of endeavors. Most of the stories are about problems—since it's the problems we often remember more than the successes—and what was learned from them. After describing a given problem, the authors analyze the issues that led to it and work towards various ways they've discovered to create a better project environment, one where problems get solved easier and happen less frequently.

It Sounded Good When We Started offers a highly readable go-to for engineers, scientists, computer professionals, and anyone working on specialized, collaborative projects.

DWAYNE PHILLIPS, PhD, has worked as a systems and computer engineer for the U.S. government since 1980. He performed liaison work with foreign governments, developed and maintained software, and for most of the past twelve years has managed projects. He is the author of The Software Project Manager's Handbook: Principles that Work at Work, also from Wiley.

ROY O'BRYAN has over forty-two years on the leading edge of technology, developing software and hardware systems. A former Senior Executive Fellow at the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, O'Bryan has worked for the past thirteen years for Northrop Grummon as a Senior Staff Engineer providing technical and management assistance to a number of government programs.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

"…this book is an entertaining read, and contains good advice…a useful reference for anyone involved in managing a technology project." (Computing Reviews.com, March 2, 2004)

From the Back Cover

A commonsense guide to real-world project management

Common sense isn’t always commonly practiced. Anyone who has ever worked on a project in a technical setting knows this. Indeed, much of working with others consists of solving unexpected problems and learning from mistakes along the way.

It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager’s Guide to Working with People on Projects is essential reading for project managers trying to understand the trials and triumphs that can arise in any project setting. The authors, both respected project managers with sixty years of experience between them, describe their own mistakes as well as the many valuable lessons they drew from them. Instead of trying to formulate these in abstract theory, Phillips and O’Bryan tell the stories surrounding a particular project, providing a more memorable, real-world, and practical set of examples.

Written in a distinctly nontechnical style, this title is a general troubleshooting guide for people who work on projects with other individuals. As such, its content will prove useful in many different settings and applies to many different kinds of endeavors. Most of the stories center around problems–since it’s the problems we often remember more than the successes–and what was learned from them. After describing a given problem, the authors analyze the issues that led to it and work towards various ways they’ve discovered of creating a better project environment, one where problems get solved more easily and happen less frequently.

It Sounded Good When We Started offers a highly readable go-to guide for project managers, engineers, scientists, computer professionals, and anyone working on specialized, collaborative projects.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 344 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley-IEEE Computer Society Pr; 1 edition (November 10, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471485861
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471485865
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6.7 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,942,460 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It Sounded Good When I Finished, February 3, 2004
By 
jerry b harvey (McLean, VA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager's Guide to Working with People on Projects (Practitioners) (Hardcover)
"It Sounded Good When I Started" sounded equally good when I finished reading it.

This is a book about project management, not as it should be, but as it is: confused, satisfying, creative, mundane, exciting, demanding and chaotic. Built around the authors' adventures with a real, large scale project named Delphi, one feels as if she/he is working with the them and their very human cohorts as they cope with problems of enormous complexity.

The chapter titles themselves should give a flavor of the book:
"Digging Yourself into a Hole,""Going Where Angels Fear to Tread: There Is No Right Way to Do the Wrong Thing," and "A Charlatan in Expert's Clothing: Writing a Lie - The Proposal..."
being typical examples.

Each chapter concludes with "clinical" phrases such as, "The Dog Ate My Plan" or "I Wasn't Involved," that serve as warnings, in everyday language, that something is amiss. The warnings are then followed by very useful "bullets" that suggest ways for coping with the "dog" or the excuses one gives for his/her participation in a phase of the project that ended in failure.

A highly readable book, it should be of interest to all people who are engaged in project management, whether the project involves creating a piece of multi-million dollar electronic equipment or planning a extended family reunion of relatives who are ambivalent about getting together.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars These Guys Have "Been There and Done That.", May 16, 2004
This review is from: It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager's Guide to Working with People on Projects (Practitioners) (Hardcover)
Excellent material, well written and cogently organized. Reads like a Steve McConnell book, but at a more general "Project Management" level instead of "Software Project Management". Loaded with funny (in hind sight *grin*) stories that make the major points very memorable.

I related to many of the stories (they read very much like AntiPatterns), and I gained important insights into a current critical project -- which is having immediate positive impact on my current planning and actions.

Very glad I read this book in time.

Strongly recommend this book for current and future project/program leaders!

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good Techniques in Context, January 27, 2008
By 
C. K. Ray "agile sw developer" (Silicon Valley, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: It Sounded Good When We Started: A Project Manager's Guide to Working with People on Projects (Practitioners) (Hardcover)
Many of the techniques used in this book's hardware/software waterfall project to make it succeed, are also used in agile software development to help them succeed. People skills, frequent feedback, keeping in touch with reality. I loved the humor and compassion exhibited by the authors. I recommend this to practitioners of Scrum, Extreme Programming, and other agile methods to provide a perspective on a real-life waterfall project and problems common to all development projects.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In November of 1998, I boarded a United Airlines flight to Los Angeles from Dulles Airport near Washington, DC. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
lab fever, right answer plan, warning sign that people, unofficial schedule, earned value system, zero award, rack fans, transit cases, project room, outsourced projects, gathering status, requirements creep, derived requirements, clock jitter, dictated plan, troubled project, ject manager, skills matrix, configuration management plan, schedule tracking, hind schedule, senior expert, upper managers, drop test, everyone every day
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Fairfax County, Doesn't Paul, East Coast, Place Where Everyone Knows Your Name, West Coast
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