Preview Extract
Chapter 2: The Manager, the Organization, and the Team
True/False
1.
It is common practice to select the project manager prior to the project being
selected.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
2.
The functional manager has expertise in the function he or she manages, but the
project manager rarely has expertise in many of the projects technical areas.
Answer: True
Response: See section2.1
Level: medium
3.
The project manager is supposed to facilitate the work of the project team and
must, therefore, stay aloof from the conflicts arising among project team
members.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
4.
The project manager should take a careful, analytic approach to making decisions
about projects.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.3
Level: medium
5.
If the performance of all subsystems is optimized, it follows that the overall
system is optimum.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
6.
The project manager must maintain a high level of flexibility in dealing with
people.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.4
Level: medium
7.
It is appropriate for the project manager to play an active role in communications
between the client and the senior management of the organization conducting the
project.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.4
Level: medium
8.
The individual with responsibility for performing a task is more likely to
overestimate the time required to complete the task than his/her immediate
supervisor.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
9.
The most effective program managers tell their project managers exactly what to
do.The project manager should not allow functional managers to usurp his or her
control of the project.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.4
Level: medium
10.
When it comes to assigning individuals to work on projects, functional managers
and project managers are often in conflict.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
11.
It is critical to a projectโs success to have top management support.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.5
Level: easy
12.
Conflict occurs mainly at the beginning of the project.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
13.
A matrix organization is a combination of pure project organization and
functional organization.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
14.
A pure project organization is usually too expensive for the management of small
projects.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.6
Level: medium
15.
An advantage of pure project organization is its great depth of technical
knowledge.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
16.
Cross divisional project communication is enhanced when a project is organized
in a functional project organization.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.6
Level: medium
17.
Functional project organizations have higher personnel costs than pure project
organizations.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
18.
Functionally organized projects are not seen as a high priority by functional
managers.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
19.
It is common to have more than one boss in a matrix organization.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.6
Level: easy
20.
Project team members are often faced with conflicting orders in a matrix
organization.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
21.
Intrateam conflicts are minimal in a matrix organization.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
22.
Since the PM has position power there is no need for them to have credibility
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.5
Level: easy
23.
Political savvy is not only an important characteristic of a project manager but is
also important for project team members.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.3
Level: easy
24.
Morale of the project team is a key responsibility of the project manager.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.3
Level: medium
25.
Project team conflict stifles team creativity.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.6
Level: medium
26.
Project โwar roomsโ discourage team cooperation, morale and communications.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
27.
Matrix, pure project, and functional project organizations may exist in the same
company.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
28.
When making trade-offs on a project, the project manager needs to be aware that
profit for the firm is always the most important of the projectโs goals.
Answer: False
Response: See section 2.2
Level: medium
29.
The job of managing work across multiple groups is called integration
management.
Answer: False
Response: Seesection 2.6
Level: medium
30.
In order for a PM to be โbelievableโ the PM must have technical and
administrative credibility.
Answer: True
Response: See section 2.3
Level: medium
Multiple Choice
31.
Fiona and her team are working on a complex project. After multiple conflicts in
the initial stages of the project, the team establishes a set of guidelines and is now
working cohesively to accomplish the project goals. In the given scenario, Fiona’s
team is in the _____ phase of team development.
a) norming
b) forming
c) storming
d) adjourning
e) performing
Answer: e
Response: See section 2.6
Level: difficult
32.
Samuel is a project manager who is working on his first project. He assembles a
multidisciplinary team and assigns roles and responsibilities to each team
member. In this scenario, Samuel is in the _____ phase of team development.
a) storming
b) norming
c) performing
d) adjourning
e) forming
Answer: e
Response: See section 2.6
Level: difficult
33.
Laura worked with a cross-functional team on a project. After the completion of
the project, she held a meeting with the team members after which they returned
to their respective departments. Which of the following phases of team
development does this scenario exemplify?
a) Storming
b) Norming
c) Performing
d) Adjourning
e) Forming
Answer: d
Response: See section 2.6
Level: difficult
34.
Albert is managing a team that comprises individuals from various departments in
his company. After facing some difficulties initially, the team members work
toward resolving the issues and collectively establish certain rules to avoid any
future conflict. In this scenario, Albert’s team is in the _____ phase of team
development.
a) storming
b) norming
c) performing
d) adjourning
e) forming
Answer: b
Response: See section 2.6
Level: difficult
35.
Sarah is handling a project team whose members are spread across different
geographical regions. The members work independently, and this leads to several
conflicts among them. In this scenario, Sarah’s team is in the _____ phase of team
development.
a) storming
b) norming
c) performing
d) adjourning
e) forming
Answer: a
Response: See section 2.6
Level: difficult
36.
Maria’s team starts working on a new project. Halfway through the project, the
client visits the team and requests some changes in the specifications of the
project. This alters both the cost and the schedule of the project. The given
scenario exemplifies the concept of _____.
a) storming
b) interface coordination
c) scope creep
d) integration management
e) administrative credibility
Answer: c
Response: See section 2.1
Level: difficult
37.
Roger and his team have been designing a factory that will be modular in nature.
They have been working on it for the past seven years, and now it is ending its
developmental cycle. Roger has observed that his team is apprehensive.He has also
received proposals for a follow-up project in the same area of interest with the
same team. This is an example of _____.
a) projectitis
b) analytical approach
c) scope creep
d) systems approach
e) norming
Answer: a
Response: See section 2.5
Level: difficult
38.
Cibrastruct, a real estate developer, has undertaken a project to construct a mall. It
hires a contractor to call in architects to draft plans, a procurement specialist to
gather the best quality of raw materials, a lawyer to ensure the proper planning
permits have been obtained, and labor union specialists to assemble a group of
workers who will work on this long-term project. This is an example of _____.
a) systems engineering
b) functional project organization
c) scope creep
d) pure project organization
e) technical credibility
Answer: d
Response: See section 2.5
Level: difficult
39.
Proteus, a hotel chain, has bought some new kitchen appliances that would enable
its kitchen staff to work more effectively. The senior management of the hotel
assigns the task of removal of old appliances and installation of new appliances to
the respective manager of the food and beverage department in each of its hotels.
The manager assembles a team from within the department to perform this task.
This scenario exemplifies _____.
a) projectitis
b) functional project organization
c) scope creep
d) pure project organization
e) systemsengineering
Answer: b
Response: See section 2.5
Level: difficult
40.
Martha has taken on an ambitious project that requires input from different
departments within the organization she works for. She also needs contributions
from external experts and contractors. She needs to bring the work of all these
groups together in a harmonious whole for the project. In the given scenario,
Martha needs to engage in _____.
a) systems engineering
b) integration management
c) scope creep
d) suboptimization
e) conscious capitalism
Answer: b
Response: See section 2.6
Level: difficult
41.
The _________________ approach centers on understanding the bits and pieces
in a system.
a) facilitating
b) analytical
c) systems
d) sensitivity
e) matrix
Answer: c
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
42.
A matrix project that closely resembles the pure project is referred to as
a) a weak matrix
b) a strong matrix
c) a functional matrix
d) a balanced matrix
e) an unbalanced matrix
Answer: b
Response: See section 2.6
Level: medium
43.
Which of the following is not a characteristic of effective project team members?
a) They are technically competent.
b) They are politically sensitive.
c) They have a strong orientation to their discipline.
d) They have a strong goal orientation.
e) They have high self-esteem.
Answer: c
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
44.
Altering the specifications of an ongoing project is referred to as
a) suboptimization
b) scope creep
c) a virtual project
d) projectitis
e) PMI
Answer: b
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
45.
The PMโs job includes all of the following except?
a) Convener and chair of meetings
b) Facilitator
c) Communicator
d) Supervisor
e) Virtual project manager
Answer: d
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
46.
The four essential skills of persuasion described Jay Conger (1998) include all of
the following except:
a) Effective persuaders must be credible to those they are trying to persuade
b) They must find goals held in common with those being persuaded
c) Must give locker-room motivational speeches
d) They must connect with the emotions of those they are trying to persuade
Answer: c
Response: Seesection 2.2
Level: medium
47.
During project formation stage, the major sources of conflict are all of the
following except:
a) Priorities
b) Procedures
c) Technical
d) Schedules
Answer: c
Response: Seesection 2.6
Level: medium
Short Answer
48.
Describe the difference between the analytic approach and the systems approach
to solving problems in a project.
Answer: The analytical approach to solving problems centers on understanding
the bits and pieces in a system. It prompts study of the molecules, then atoms,
then electrons, and so forth. The systems approach includes study of the bits and
pieces, but also an understanding of how they fit together, how they interact, and
how they affect and are affected by their environment. The systems approach
manager conducts the group so that it contributes to total system optimization.To
be successful, the project manager must adopt the systems approach. Consider
that the project is a system composed of tasks (subsystems) which are composed
of subtasks, and so on.
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
49.
Why are negotiation skills an important criterion of a successful project manager?
Answer: It is not possible for aproject manager to fulfil his or her responsibilities
without being a skilled negotiator and resolver of conflict. The acquisition of
resources requires negotiation. Dealing with problems, conflict, and fires requires
negotiation and conflict resolution. The same skills are needed when the project
manager is asked to lead the project to a successful conclusionโand to make the
trade-offs required along the way. A project managerwho lacks these skills cannot
be successful. There is no stage of the project life cycle that is not characterized
by specific types of conflict. If these are not resolved, the project will suffer and
possibly die.
Response: See section 2.2
Level: medium
50.
Define โprojectitis.โ
Answer: A disease called โprojectitisโ is one of the most serious problems seen in
R&D projects or in projects that have fairly long lives. People assigned to a
project tend to form strong attachments to it, and the project begins to take on a
life of its own. One pronounced symptom of projectitisis worry about โIs there
life after the project?โ Foot dragging as the project end draws near is common, as
is the submission of proposals for follow-up projects in the same area of
interestโand using the same project team.
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
51.
It is said that the distinction between the traditional manager-as-supervisor and
the modern manager-as-facilitator is diminishing in recent years. Why?
Answer: The once sharp distinction between the manager-as-facilitator and the
manager-as-supervisor has been softened in recent years. With the slow but steady
adoption of the participative management philosophy, the general manager has
become more and more like the project manager. In particular, responsibility for
the planning and organization of specific tasks is given to the individuals or
groups that must perform them, always constrained, of course, by company
policy, legality, and conformity to high ethical standards. The managerโs
responsibility is to make sure that the required resources are available and that the
task is properly concluded. The transition from traditional authoritarian
management to facilitation continues because facilitation is more effective as a
managerial style.
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
52.
What is meant by the phrase โscope creep?โ
Answer: Sometimes during a project, the client may drop in to check on a project
and ask a team member, โWould it be possible to alter the specs to include suchand-such?โ The team member may think for a moment about the technical
problems involved and then answer quite honestly, โYeah, that could be done.โ
Again, the project manager must interveneโ if and when the question and answer
come to lightโto determine the cost of making such a change, as well as the
added time that would be required. The project manager must then ask whether
the client wishes to alter the project scope given the added cost and delayed
delivery. This scenario is called scope creep. It is the project manager’s nightmare.
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
53.
What is a โvirtual project?โ
Answer: More and more often, project teams are geographically dispersed. Many
projects are international, and team members may be on different continents, for
example, aircraft engine design and engine construction. Many are carried out by
different organizations in different locations. Similarly, many projects involve
different divisions of one firm where the divisions are in different cities. These
geographically dispersed projects are often referred to as โvirtual projects,”
possibly because so much of the intra-project communication is conducted via
email, through websites, by telephone or video conferencing, and other hightechnology methods.
Response: See section 2.1
Level: medium
54.
Briefly describe the project managerโs role as a firefighter. What sorts of
obstacles do project managers have to overcome?
Answer: A key responsibility of the project manager is to deal with obstacles. All
projects have their crisesโfires that must be quenched. A successful project
manager is also a talented and seasoned fire fighter. Early in the projectโs life
cycle, fires are often linked to the need for resources. Budgets get cut, and the
general cuts must be transformed into highly specific cuts in the quantities of
highly specific resources. An X percent cut must be translated into Y units of this
commodity or Z hours of that engineerโs time. As work on the project progresses,
most fires are associated with technical problems, supplier problems, and client
problems. Technical problems occur, for example, when some subsystem (e.g., a
computer program) is supposed to work but fails. Typical supplier problems occur
when subcontracted parts are late or do not meet specifications. Most experienced
project managers are good fire fighters. If they do not develop this skill, they do
not last as project managers.
Response: See section 2.2
Level: medium
55.
Briefly describe and contrast pure project organization, functional project
organization, and the matrix project organization.
Answer: In a pure project organization, the supplies, equipment, and workers
arrive just when they are needed, do the work, complete the project, and disband.
The project manager (PM) is, in effect, the CEO of the project. When the project
is completed, accepted by the client, equipment returned, and local workers paid
off, then the PM and the specialists return to their parent firm and await the next
job. For large projects, the pure project organization is effective and efficient, but
for small projects it is a very expensive way to operate.
Quite unlike pure projects that are generally separated from the day-to-day
operations of the parent organization, functionally organized projects are
embedded in the functional group where the project will be used. This
immediately corrects some of the problems associated with pure projects. First,
the functional project has immediate, direct, and complete contact with the most
important technologies it may need, and it has in-depth access. Second, the
fractional resource problem is minimized for anyone working in the projectโs
home functional group. Functionally organized projects do not have the high
personnel costs associated with pure projects because they can easily assign
people to the project on a part-time basis.
In an attempt to capture the advantages of both the pure project organization and
the functionally organized project as well as to avoid the problems associated with
each type, a new type of project organizationโmore accurately, a combination of
the twoโwas developed.
To form a matrix organized project, a pure project is superimposed on a
functionally organized system. The project manager reports to a program
manager, a vice-president of projects, or some senior individual with a similar
title whose job it is to coordinate the activities of several or all of the projects.
These projects may or may not be related, but they all demand the parentโs
resources and the use of resources mustbe coordinated, if not the projects
themselves. This method of organizing the interfacebetween projects and the
parent organization succeeds in capturing the major advantagesof both pure and
functional projects.
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
56.
Briefly list the primary advantages and disadvantages of a matrix project
organization.
Answer: One of the most important strengths of a matrix project organization is
its flexibility, that is, the way in which it can interface with the parent
organization. Because it is, or can be, connected to any or all of the parent
organizationโs functional units, it has access to any or all of the parent
organizationโs technology. The way it utilizes the services of the several technical
units need not be the same for each unit. This allows the functional departments to
optimize their contributions to any project. They can meet a projectโs needs in a
way that is most efficient. Being able to share expertise with several projects
during a limited time period makes the matrix arrangement far less expensive than
the pure project with its duplication of competencies, and just as technologically
โdeepโ as the functional project. The flexibility of the matrix is particularly useful
for globalized projects that often require integrating knowledge and personnel
coming from geographically dispersed independent business units, each of which
may be organized quite differently than the others.
The matrix has a strong focus on the project itself, just as does the pure project.
In this, it is clearly superior to the functional project that often is subordinate to
the regular work of the functional group. With all their advantages, matrix
projects have their own, unique problems. By far the most significant of these is
the violation of an old dictum of the military and of management theory, the
Unity of Command principle: For each subordinate, there shall be one, and only
one, superior. In matrix projects, the individual specialist borrowed from a
function has two bosses. The project manager may control which tasks the
specialist undertakes, but the specialist reports to a functional manager who
makes decisions about the specialistโs performance evaluation, promotion, and
salary. Thus, project workers are often faced with conflicting orders from the
project manager and the functional manager. The result is conflicting demands on
their time and activities.
While the ability to balance resources, schedules, and deliverables between
several projects is an advantage of a matrix organization, that ability has its dark
side. The organizationโs full set of projects must be carefully monitored by the
program manager. Further, the movement of resources from project to project in
order to satisfy the individual schedules of the multiple projects may foster
political infighting among the several project managers.
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
57.
List the key characteristics of effective project team members.
Answer: Effective team members have some characteristics in common. Some of
them are as follows:
1. They must be technically competent. While functional departments will always
remain the ultimate source of technological problem solving for a project, it
requires a technically competent person to know exactly when additional
technical knowledge may be required by the project.
2. Senior members of project teams must be politically sensitive. It is rarely
possibleto complete a project of reasonable size and complexity without incurring
problemsthat require aid from the upper echelons of executive row; that is, from a
project sponsor.
3. Members of a project team need a strong problem orientation. The teamโs
members should be concerned about solving any problems posed by the project,
not merely about those subproblems that concern their individual academic or
technical training.
4. Team members need a strong goal orientation. Projects are uncomfortable
environments for people with a 9-to-5 view of work. In particular, neither project
teams nor project managers can succeed if their focus is on activity rather than
results.
5. Project workers need high self-esteem. Team members must be sufficiently
self-confident and have sufficient trust in their fellow team members that they can
immediately acknowledge their own errors and point out problems caused by the
errors of others.
Response: See section 2.6
Level: medium
58.
What does โPMOโ stand for? What is its purpose?
Answer: One of the ways of addressing some of the challenges associated with
the alternative organizational forms for projects is to set up a project management
office (PMO). The parent organization can set up the PMO, more or less like a
functional group or as a center of excellence with its own manager. This group
may act as staff to some or to all projects. The project office may handle some or
all of the budgeting, scheduling, reporting, scope, compliance with corporate
governance, and risk management activities while the functional units supply the
technical work. The PMO often serves as a repository for project documents and
histories. However, the PMO must never replace the project manager as officer in
charge of and accountable for the project.
Response: See section 2.5
Level: medium
59.
Explain the importance of credibility and why PMโs need it.
Answer: For aproject manager, credibility is critical. In essence, it means that the
project manager is believable. There are two areas in which the project manager
needs believability. The first is technical credibility, and the second is
administrative credibility. Aproject manager is not expected to have an expertโs
knowledge of each of the technologies that may be germane to the project. The
project manager should, however, have expertise in one or more areas of
knowledge relevant to the project. In particular, a project manager must know
enough to explain the current state of the project, its progress, and its technical
problems to senior management who may lack technical training.
While quite different, administrative credibility is just as significant to the project.
For management and the client to have faith in the viability of the project, reports,
appraisals, audits, and evaluations must be timely and accurate. For the team,
resources, personnel, and knowledge must be available when needed. For all
parties, aproject manager must be able to make the difficult trade-offs that allow
the project to meet its objectives as well as possible. This requires mature
judgment and considerable courage.
Response: See section 2.3
Level: medium
60.
How are the PMBOK and PMI related?
Answer: The Project Management Institute (PMI) is a professional organization
that has been devoted to project management. The growth in the field of project
management has been exponential. Among other reasons for this growth is the
project-oriented organization. The PMI has published the Project Management
Body of Knowledge (PMBOK). It also publishes two professional periodicals;
first, the Project Management Journal, oriented to project management theory,
though its articles are almost uniformly related to the actual practice of project
management; and second, the PM Network magazine, which is a trade journal
aimed at practitioners.Both publications are valuable for experienced project
managers as well as neophytes or students.
Response: See section 2.4
Level: medium
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