脆弱性与议程:项目管理中的情境与过程

Vulnerability and Agenda: Context and Process in Project Management

BRITISH JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT · 1991
被引 44
人大 A-ABS 4

中文导读

通过日记和调查数据,识别出影响项目经理角色的四个情境维度,并分析不同脆弱性水平下内容、控制和过程议程的优先级变化,对项目管理者选拔和职业发展有参考价值。

Abstract

SUMMARY This paper explores how the project management role is conditioned by the context in which change is progressed. The argument draws on Pettigrew's (1985, 1987) contextual and processual view of change, a view which does not clarify the management implications of contextual variation. Using data from a two‐stage research design combining diary and survey methods, four context dimensions are identified, concerning ‘interlocking’, ‘shifting sands’, ‘ownership’ and ‘senior management view’. For analytical purposes, two extreme contexts are characterized as exposing the project manager to high and low levels of ‘vulnerability’ respectively. Project management literature typically offers a rational‐linear account of change, and concentrates on ‘content’ and ‘control’ agendas, concerning technical expertise on the one hand, and planning, budgeting and monitoring techniques on the other. Sociological analyses reveal the limitations of the rational‐linear account, and focus on the political and cultural dimensions of the ‘process’ agenda. The data suggest how contextual variation affects the relative priority of these agendas. The management implications of these findings are explored, for project management selection, career progression, and the development of diagnostic skills and ‘agenda management’ strategies.

项目管理组织变革情境分析过程管理