Automated project monitoring methods

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Monitor and control is a vital part of a project, to make sure a project follow course according to scope deadlines and cost, there is a need to collect relevant information and analyse it. If there is any deviation to the established cost, schedule, or scope, the project manager and stakeholder can take the necessary actions to address the problem as fast as possible, thus safeguarding against further deviations.
 
Monitor and control is a vital part of a project, to make sure a project follow course according to scope deadlines and cost, there is a need to collect relevant information and analyse it. If there is any deviation to the established cost, schedule, or scope, the project manager and stakeholder can take the necessary actions to address the problem as fast as possible, thus safeguarding against further deviations.
This article only discusses the different processes and methods to monitor a project, to collect relevant data for further analysis. Monitoring needs to be efficient and relevant, the kind of collected data varies widely from the kind of project (construction, software, research…) and from the way the project was planned. Enabled by new technologies and to be more cost-effective, automatic data collection systems are increasingly becoming used in the industry and can supplement traditional processes.
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This article only discusses the different processes and methods to monitor a project, to collect relevant data for further analysis. Monitoring needs to be efficient and relevant, the kind of collected data varies widely from the kind of project (construction, software, research…) and from the way the project was planned.  
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Enabled by new technologies and to be more cost-effective, automatic data collection systems are increasingly becoming used in the industry and can supplement traditional processes. Project monitoring is therefore a rapidly evolving part of project managment.
  
 
<ref>Project Management Institute(2014) [http://proquestcombo.safaribooksonline.com/book/software-engineering-and-development/project-management/9781935589679/4dot-project-integration-management/sub4_4_xhtml "A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Fifth Edition"], Project Management Institute</ref>  
 
<ref>Project Management Institute(2014) [http://proquestcombo.safaribooksonline.com/book/software-engineering-and-development/project-management/9781935589679/4dot-project-integration-management/sub4_4_xhtml "A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Fifth Edition"], Project Management Institute</ref>  

Revision as of 23:52, 12 February 2018

Abstract

Monitor and control is a vital part of a project, to make sure a project follow course according to scope deadlines and cost, there is a need to collect relevant information and analyse it. If there is any deviation to the established cost, schedule, or scope, the project manager and stakeholder can take the necessary actions to address the problem as fast as possible, thus safeguarding against further deviations.

This article only discusses the different processes and methods to monitor a project, to collect relevant data for further analysis. Monitoring needs to be efficient and relevant, the kind of collected data varies widely from the kind of project (construction, software, research…) and from the way the project was planned.

Enabled by new technologies and to be more cost-effective, automatic data collection systems are increasingly becoming used in the industry and can supplement traditional processes. Project monitoring is therefore a rapidly evolving part of project managment.

[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]


Contents


A combination of processes

Qualitative methods

Through Project planning tools

Manual monitoring

Quantitative methods

Remote collection

Data processing

References

  1. Project Management Institute(2014) "A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide), Fifth Edition", Project Management Institute
  2. Peterson, F, Fischer, M(2009) "Project Monitoring Methods Exploratory Case Analysis: Industry Responses", CIFE
  3. Miura Machado, Heydi, Alexandre L'Erario, Alessandro Duarte.(2017) "An analysis of Kanban as a project monitoring tool in undergraduate courses", Ieee Frontiers in Education Conference (fie)
  4. Isaac, Shabtai, and Ronie Navon.(2014) "Can Project Monitoring and Control Be Fully Automated?", Construction Management and Economics
  5. Li, Xiaoguang, and Lixia Wang.(2014) "Research on Important Process of Project Monitoring and Control", Advanced Materials Research
  6. Johnson. (1964) "PERT/PMD - Project monitoring device", Ieee Transactions on Engineering Management
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