Designing Effective Project Organisations

From apppm
Revision as of 09:26, 13 June 2017 by S133831 (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

This article will present and discuss the following chapters:

  • 15.4 The responsibilities of the client
  • 15.5 Who is the project manager?
  • 15.6 Organising the project through the life cycle
  • 15.7 Project organisation in construction
  • 15.8 Determining the organisation breakdown structure

This article will first present the most relevant terms and definitions within the chapters. Afterwards some of the models and theories will be analysed and discussed, in addition literature studies will also be carried out to support the article. Lastly, some recommendations or reflections upon the topics will be conducted.

When designing effective project organisations a lot of different factors and actors have to be considered, for instance the responsibilities and management options of the client. How to organise through the life cycle of a project, determination of the organisational breakdown structure and creating optimal and efficient project teams.

Different managers within construction management

Winch has presented two different managers within construction management; a project manager and a resource-base manager. The project manager is characterised as the 'manager in the middle', in this context it is between the client and the resource-base managers. The purpose of the project manager is to act as an interface between the client's desires and the capabilities of the resource bases. In addition the project manager has the responsibility to coordinate during the project life cycle in order to fulfil the client's desires and goals. Winch has presented an overview of the different responsibilities that the project and resource-base managers have, this is illustrated by table XX.

The responsibilities of the client

The client assembles a coalition of firms to execute the project mission, and the contractual documents between the firms define the project organisation structure. However the client possess important responsibilities towards leading the project coalition, the responsibilities are:

  • Promoter – defining the need for the project and ensuring that it meets that need;
  • Financier – obtaining the capital required to finance the project;
  • Decision-maker – making those decisions required to push the project through the life cycle;
  • Recruiter – mobilising the most appropriate and capable firms to realise the project. This is a legal obligation under European health and safety legislation.

It is difficult to fulfil all the responsibilities and usually not all the clients have the proper organisational capabilities. The need for these organisational capabilities has led to a development of firms who provide project management services. These firms are often called 'project managers', but in practice, they do not manage and provide co-ordination between resource bases, instead they help the client fulfil its responsibilities towards the project coalition. Winch has presented some of the client's project management options, this is illustrated on figure XX. [1]

Who is the project manager

  1. Winch, Graham M., Wiley-Blackwell, 2010, "Managing Construction Projects, 2nd edition "
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox