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Management

Management has been proven to be the most effective method of delivering products. By using all the knowledge to effectively manage projects, identify and manage the project scope, build a work breakdown structure, create a project plan, create the project budget, define and allocate resources, manage the project development, project timeline and milestone, identify and manage risks, and understand the project procurement process.

In many organizations today don't employ full-time project managers. Indeed, it's common to pull together a project team to meet a particular need, one that usually involves producing an end product or service that benefits the organization or effects change. The end result can be tangible or intangible.

Getting to that end result, successfully, is what project management is all about. At its core, then, project management centers on the planning and control of everything involved in delivering the end result - and it's a process that every person on a project team needs to embrace, understand and execute, no matter the experience level. Even if you lack academic skills in a project methodology, taking a role in a project team provides an excellent learning opportunity, one that can improve your career profile. Even if you're an experienced manager or team member, a review of the critical - and most basic - elements of project management can inform and improve how effectively you take projects from concept to concrete plan and through to completion.

Management is all about creating an environment and conditions in which to achieve a particular goal or objective - in a controlled manner with a team of people. When you're familiar with what project management entails, from the process to mitigating all that can possibly (and often does) go wrong, you affect the end result - whether you're engaged in a project methodology for the first time or a seasoned pro.

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