Week 5 Project
Project Audit
The subject of a project audit is not very popular, and some managers have a tendency to skip project audits
altogether. There are several reasons for this, and they are all very human.
However, audits become part of the permanent record of the project, which has important implications for
organizational growth, learning at the cultural level, and project management maturity efforts. An audit helps to establish best practices for future projects.
Project audits can take many forms and formats, but there are some very important concerns a good audit should
address. The main concern of an audit is how well the objectives of the project were achieved. However, the
responses to the concern may vary quite a bit, depending on individual points of view. For example, the
contracting of�cer may have a different set of opinions than the project manager. Team members may also differ
in their opinion, as they often have informal goals set and expectations. More importantly, the project sponsor and the customer also have a stake, which must be given due importance.
Con�icts in aggressive projects are virtually inevitable. In this context, aggressive means that during the planning
stage a project has set ambitious cost, schedule, and technical goals. The fact of each one being dif�cult to meet
presents a set of three individually tough problems, but, in turn, it becomes even more likely for trade-offs to
happen among the triple-threat parameters.
When properly managed, certain con�icts can be very useful in �nding unique solutions to problems. It also helps
in advancing project management competencies across the organization. Professional con�icts or disagreements are sometimes a very healthy sign. They often indicate the company is a tough competitor; that it has set tougher
performance standards for itself than the market forces. Such companies often become global leaders in their
respective industries.
Destructive con�ict can destabilize personal and group morale, cause a sense of isolation in some members,
distort the effective communications vital for developing team effectiveness, and inhibit some individuals from
taking the initiative for handling problems they are best suited at solving. Members can become mildly paranoid and risk averse in this type of con�ict. Whether con�ict becomes constructive or destructive, depends not only on
the inherent nature of the problem, but also on how well it is managed by the formal leader, the informal leaders,
and other individuals on the team.
Project managers use their experience, their people's skill, and sometimes pure instinct to tackle project-related
problems. Let's see what the right time is for con�ict resolution and negotiation:
Additional Materials
View a Pdf Transcript of The Reason why managers avoid audits (media/week5/SU_MGT3035_W5_L5_G1.pdf?
_&d2lSessionVal=ci8aH3u0fFqOZQwWEPolysax6&ou=85477)
View a Pdf Transcript of Con�icts (media/week5/SU_MGT3035_W5_L2_G1.pdf?
_&d2lSessionVal=ci8aH3u0fFqOZQwWEPolysax6&ou=85477)
View a Pdf Transcript of Nature of Con�ict (media/week5/SU_MGT3035_W5_L2_G2.pdf?
_&d2lSessionVal=ci8aH3u0fFqOZQwWEPolysax6&ou=85477)
View a Pdf Transcript of Con�ict Resolution and Negotiation (media/week5/SU_MGT3035_W5_L2_G3.pdf?
_&d2lSessionVal=ci8aH3u0fFqOZQwWEPolysax6&ou=85477)