“…- The project business case and how far it depends on needs and costs, which are changing.
- Information’s role in managing the project and the information flow between different players, allowing them to perform their roles and allowing risk and uncertainty to be managed.
- Project flexibility e.g. interdependence between tasks or activities, availability and flexibility of resources – the so-called “critical chain” of Leach (2014) – and flexibility of different activities’ start and end times.
- Reasons for problems and delays at each stage and the fact that during a project, new opportunities or risks may appear, suggesting the need to replan to capture or avoid/mitigate them (Hillson, 2019; Johansen et al , 2016; Krane et al , 2014), but redesigning/respecifying projects during implementation creates more problems, as does non-conformance of progress or final outcomes, leading to rectification and further cost/delay problems.
- Human resource aspects of project management, especially capacity (determined not only by resources but also by the quality of project managers and how they work (Dalcher, 2019) and the systems and processes that support them), the maturity of the organisation in relation to project management (e.g. does it have a long history of executing successful projects), whether the organisation is ambidextrous (Turner et al , 2016a, 2016b; Turner et al , 2013; Khanagha et al , 2014) (able to continue with operations while managing change on some definitions, on others using, refining, and building on existing expertise) while exploring exploration (innovation and problem solving) and mindful (again this has different definitions, conscious of what it is, what it can do, what it is planning to do, what the associated risks are and how they might be handled, and so on).
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