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The Fast Forward MBA in Project Management

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The all-inclusive guide to exceptional project managementThe Fast Forward MBA in Project Management is the comprehensive guide to real-world project management methods, tools, and techniques. Practical, easy-to-use, and deeply thorough, this book gives you answers you need now. You'll find the cutting-edge ideas and hard-won wisdom of one of the field's leading experts, delivered in short, lively segments that address common management issues. Brief descriptions of important concepts, tips on real-world applications, and compact case studies illustrate the most sought-after skills and the pitfalls you should watch out for. This new fifth edition features new case studies, new information on engaging stakeholders, change management, new guidance on using Agile techniques, and new content that integrates current events and trends in the project management sphere.Project management is a complex role, with seemingly conflicting demands that must be coordinated into a single, overarching, executable strategy — all within certain time, resource, and budget constraints. This book shows you how to get it all together and get it done, with expert guidance every step of the way. Navigate complex management issues effectively Master key concepts and real-world applications Learn from case studies of today's leading experts Keep your project on track, on time, and on budget From finding the right sponsor to clarifying objectives to setting a realistic schedule and budget projection, all across different departments, executive levels, or technical domains, project management incorporates a wide range of competencies. The Fast Forward MBA in Project Management shows you what you need to know, the best way to do it, and what to watch out for along the way.

517 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 24, 1999

474 people are currently reading
990 people want to read

About the author

Eric Verzuh

5 books3 followers

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5 stars
192 (24%)
4 stars
309 (38%)
3 stars
212 (26%)
2 stars
64 (8%)
1 star
20 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews
Profile Image for Shawn Buckle.
93 reviews4 followers
June 8, 2013
You're not going to walk away a PMP-certified project manager after reading this book, but it is the first step. It's aptly named "Fast Forward" as that is what the author does, touching upon most areas of project management from a high-level and providing the general structure, tools and organization of it.

Recommended for those fresh to the discipline, but if you have any past experience, most of it will be well understood.
919 reviews101 followers
June 30, 2017
A very long and very helpful introduction to the art and science of project management. There are a few things that are poorly explained or overly general, but this book has been a very helpful resource for me.
Profile Image for Jonathan.
76 reviews
February 27, 2017
Read with PMBOK. For a class. Was moderately helpful. The combined class, this book, and PMBOK created a lot of critical thinking about project management. Wouldn't use everything here, but picking appropriate things is good.
Profile Image for Char.
42 reviews
May 19, 2017
This book gives a great overview of PM work. It isn't written in an overly complicated language, and the examples are pretty easy to follow.
Profile Image for Chouba Nabil.
207 reviews4 followers
April 26, 2023
sharing some notes :

Manufacturing is on going operation, become more efficient at a task

Project management is to lead disparate people to do good decisions over and over as they make something new

Discover there direction at every step

Real courage is not going gaist ennui boulet, it’s seeing truth and speaking truth to each others
( issue is it’s not always safe, )

Referent othority recognise others expertise and parsing them, being hamble and leassen to others ( kind of showing respect )
Admitting mistake, transparent, trust worthy

Scum leading is making and going to a gaol that team will self manage it self

Politics is leading behind the seen

Choose to model the culture you want
Commitment of the team rarely raise above commitment of the leader

Bad news can’t be ignored, be transparent this will build respect of team

Study risk % and obstacles 100% will happen

For each objective : what will be measured and how we will do it

PM should identify steak holder role, what is my authority, does this mean I will relefied for others

Sponsor add the PM authority lack, they can offer advise, or define priority, my Ofer power on behalf of PM. Responsable for Success : help PM and team to be successful, they champion the project

Risk
Probability, magnitude ( who are worth checking)
Defition, consconse
Probablty x consecone = impact
Rank them, make strategy to reduce risk,
30 management reserve : the unknown
Profile Image for Hoang Dang.
9 reviews2 followers
April 8, 2018
It applied many knowledge from fundamentals to advances in Project Management. It also applied many valuable PM forms & templates to be great your reference in the future. I recommend you who is reading my comment, should try to enrole to the specialization "Introduction to Project Management Principles and Practices" on https://www.coursera.org/. You will get more useful case studies as well as great links and materials from these courses. Enjoy!
Profile Image for Matthew.
610 reviews16 followers
August 11, 2017
Better than 90% of most project management books I've read.
Profile Image for Jenn "JR".
609 reviews109 followers
June 28, 2017
Overall this was a really well written and useful book. I found the background information to be extremely useful and highlighted a TON. It's a great general reference that provides actual examples of things that you read about in the PMBOK, making it a really great supplemental text for the PMBOK. I'll be keeping this one around for general refresher -- great information on things like decision making style, conflict management, the historical background of the discipline and so on.
Profile Image for Jeremiah Cunningham.
Author 12 books13 followers
December 31, 2022
I read this book as part of a book study with my work team. It is an approachable read for those wanting to learn more about project management, but I do highly recommend you take it slowly. The content is technical and the vocabulary is very unique to the project management realm. My only complaint with the book was at times it felt very repetitive. Overall, a good choice if you want to improve your project management knowledge.
Profile Image for Jacqueline Aubin.
86 reviews
December 29, 2018
It’s essentially an interpretation of the PMBOK. There are few practical examples or applications. Templates are blank and lack examples for content. I didn’t find it very useful and had to reference several other books.
Profile Image for muhammedallia.
285 reviews1 follower
January 31, 2020
I've read half of this book twice, a year apart. It's certainly more digestible than other project management books (especially the PMBOK). Seems like a great reference book if you're familiar with the concepts already, but the templates aren't as easily accessible or useful as I'd like.
7 reviews1 follower
May 2, 2021
Simple and sound Project Management principles, explained

This is a great example of how a large amount of information can be explained and scaled down to maximize the reader’s understanding of the material
Profile Image for Aileen.
476 reviews
June 13, 2021
This was a good reference guide for someone with additional project management resources. There were not a ton of engaging anecdotes or anything that made this particularly interesting to read but the content was valid.
Profile Image for Todd Williams.
Author 2 books1 follower
February 10, 2019
Good overview of project management. I use it in one of the classes I teach.
Profile Image for Julio Escoboza.
178 reviews10 followers
April 28, 2020
The book provides you with a summarize information about Project Management and what you should know and do when working as a PM.
Profile Image for Ahmed Alkatheeri.
48 reviews7 followers
June 13, 2022
A useful reference for people who lead project delivery, looking for project management knowledge, and prepare for the PMP exam.

It’s a large book contains around 580 pages separated by chapters that follow almost predictive (waterfall) and some mentioned adaptive (Agile) approaches. I would like to see the alignment of the book with the last version of PMBok (7th addition) where adding performance domains and project management standards.
83 reviews8 followers
June 3, 2009
Very useful, excellent intro course into project management and a solid prep to become PMP-certified. Like many business books, though, it's pretty dry and not something to be downed in a couple sittings...
Profile Image for Arden.
96 reviews4 followers
December 29, 2011
I took a two-day class on project management this fall. This book was strongly recommended as a textbook to accompany the class. I appreciate being brought up to speed on the process and philosophy of project management, but this book was kind of tedious to read.
Profile Image for Kanishk.
6 reviews
February 2, 2015
Very realistic and hands on advice for program/project managers. If you are looking for some practical tips and tricks instead of theoretical PMBOK stuff, I'm sure this book will help you. There are some templates also available on their website which can provide a good start for new PMs.
Profile Image for Lamont.
5 reviews
May 13, 2021
If you're like me, you learn by experiencing. This book is about the experience in project management which for me was invaluable in my success in passing the PMP. This book gave me real-world examples of other's projects and I was able to compare and contrast those examples to my own experience.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews

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