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Coping with IS/IT Risk Management: The Recipes of Experienced Project Managers (Practitioner)
 
 

Coping with IS/IT Risk Management: The Recipes of Experienced Project Managers (Practitioner) (Paperback)

by Tony Moynihan (Author) "Over a decade ago, Studs Terkel wrote a now famous book called Working ..." (more)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 332 pages
  • Publisher: Springer; illustrated edition edition (26 Feb 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1852335556
  • ISBN-13: 978-1852335557
  • Product Dimensions: 24.7 x 19.6 x 2.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 1,357,683 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

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Product Description

Product Description

This is a book in which successful, experienced IT solutions providers talk about their actual practical experiences in IT risk management. Tony Moynihan has asked successful IS/IT project managers to compare and contrast their recent projects in terms of the various important and different factors they had to deal with in each project. Coping with IS/IT Risk Management discusses how to:- handle unrealistic client expectations; - decide on the 'ownership' of a project; - set targets that work in practice! The result is a very well-written, interesting book, which will be enormously helpful to any professional needing to cope with the many and varied problems which can be encountered in IS/IT risk management. About the Author: Tony Moynihan is a Professor at the School of Computer Applications at Dublin City University, researching in the field of software engineering and software project risk-analysis. "This is probably one of the most real, useful, and entertaining books I have ever read on project management."(Robert L Glass, Editor, The Software Practitioner)"In my opinion, this book contains great practical advice to IS/IT project managers, based on the experience of other IT project managers. Tony succeeds in getting project managers to talk about their projects and the associated risks. He then distils these candid interviews into practical advice for other IS/IT project managers." (Nancy Mead, SEI, Carnegie-Mellon University, USA) "A useful book for any project manager to use and to reflect on, as they undertake their day-to-day activities." (Robert Cochran, Director, Centre for Software Engineering, Dublin)

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Over a decade ago, Studs Terkel wrote a now famous book called Working. Read the first page
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Candid interviews give 37 recipes for coping with reality, 1 Aug 2002
Candid interviews with twenty experienced project managers are the central feature of this book from Prof. Tony Moynihan of the School of Computer Applications at Dublin City University. His method of interviewing and simulating situations extracted key insights from these veteran solution providers as to how they really cope with messy reality.

Project managers can read this book as if it were like their informal networking, swapping stories over the bar with their peers. Students can see how real life situations arise and what coping mechanisms are brought to bear to manage the chaos of real life. The professional researcher will home in on the chapters where the methodology is revealed, that of eliciting personal constructs.

The examples chosen come from the small-scale 2-month to 2-year projects that most commercial implementations focus on. Read and enjoy this refreshing set of candid-camera snapshots!

Tony Moynihan's aim was to tackle the problem of finding out the basis for people's actions when they are better at doing the work than describing how they work. Intuitive knowledge is always richer in information than any external description of it. So, in part 1 he interviewed 14 experienced systems consultants, implementers and developers, to identify the factors that matter to them.

The key question was "What makes different projects different?" He gives five interviews verbatim, showing how he repeated combinations of questions to arrive at the scale of weighting that the interviewees applied to each factor, and in what way combining them created new threats or opportunities.

He gives a table of 113 constructs obtained from this analysis. This showed the importance of non-technical, more "political" constructs such as commitment, control, support, and stability. He then compares these to risk factors identified in the Information Systems project management literature.

In part 2, he explored with twenty more project managers (PMs) some situations which featured the most frequently mentioned concepts in more or less risky combinations, and provides the actual transcripts of the conversations. These are quite revealing!

This is the best part of the book. Many times, they say "I'll give you an example" and then relate some horrendous yarn that explains why they are so touchy about that point. To illustrate the "hidden agenda" concept that they all dig for like sniffer dogs after contraband, one tells the story of an airport that deliberately bought less efficient gate allocation software because they wanted to use the tool to justify buying a new terminal.

In part 3, he explains his method and reflects back on the research material provided to provide common coping strategies or recipes. Quotations are collected under each heading to show how they are talked about. Students embarking on their first industrial project assignment would be well advised to read these for some vicarious experience of the issues of ownership and control, the problems of change and learning; ending with the "Doomsday scenario", projects you should walk away from!

In part 4, he presents the material from other points of view ... interorganizational trust; agency theory; planned organizational change; capability; action, rationality and control; requirements uncertainty. The researcher will be interested in the chapter "What's the book really been about", on knowledge elicitation.

Finally, the appendices included a detailed listing of the "recipes for success" (or at least avoiding disaster), with the evidence for each shown backed up by the interview notes....

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1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Wrong people talking about the wrong strategies, 10 May 2003
By A Customer
Moynihan's book has been written from IS/IT project suppliers' viewpoint. All project managers featured in the book "manage information systems development projects for external clients" (p1). That is a pity since it is the clients who are desperate for recipes to manage IS/IT project risks. So often, the clients are left with "the baby" while the suppliers walk off with fat fees for licensing, consultancy and training. It is perhaps the clients' risks that must be addressed so that they can have some confidence in starting new IS/IT projects. Otherwise, we will stay in the industry downturn that bit longer. That is why I think the book has got the wrong people talking in the first place.

Even from the suppliers' viewpoint, the book has failed to address some real issues suppliers face. The issues of realistic bids and sensible estimates are both technically challenging and commercially critical for suppliers. Yet the book does not address them, at least not honestly by the talking project managers. In dealing with the issue of potential competitors, one project manager simply said that "you need to know what they are charging" (p137) --- well, that is surely too obvious!

In many situations, the talking PMs simply suggest "walk away". This suggests two things. One is that in these situations, PMs have no recipe for a satisfactory outcome either for the client or for the supplier's own company. Secondly, the supplier can afford to walk away, which happens in the supplier's market. It was a supplier's market in the IS/IT industry a few years ago, not so at the moment.

The book is perhaps redeemed somewhat by the author's candidacy about the weakness of his approach (p248-249), though I find it incredible that the author claimed for "no reason to suspect the presence" of any bias in the results! Supplier PMs will not talk about their hidden agendas - that is obvious as well!

Two stars status is awarded only with recognition that the author must have consumed much Guinness before going through many recorded tapes.

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