Skip to main content

Book Review - Foreword Clarion

 

BOOK REVIEW - Foreword Clarion

Just received the review from Foreword Clarion Review for Simple Project Management - do read on for more insights. 

Overview of Foreword Clarion Review:

“Simple” Project Management: For Noobs to Pros
Ng Wei Kwan
PartridgeSingapore
(122pp)
978-1-5437-8156-4

Ng Wei Kwan’s guidebook “Simple“ Project Management introduces novices to the art of project management.

Projects exist beyond business as usual, the book says, as the enriching “extra” tasks undertaken to improve one’s circumstances or achieve a goal. But, it notes, studies show that nearly 70 percent of personal projects, such as learning to play guitar, fail, while for professional projects, failure rates are estimated to be up to 80 percent. Building upon the Project Management Institute’s Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK) and personal experiences, the book explores the elements that contribute to a project’s success or failure, guiding project managers through steps including initiating, planning, executing, monitoring and controlling, and closing the process.

Catering to those new to project management as well as those striving toward Project Management Professional certification, the book boasts a low barrier to entry. It expects no prior knowledge and is made up of succinct, direct chapters. Its longest and most illuminating chapter covers the steps of planning and executing a project in concise but insightful terms. For example, it recommends measuring and evaluating key performance indicators (KPIs) that align with an organization’s mission and advocates for a realistic schedule (one that is clear, within budget, and allots some buffer time). Its instructions are specific and direct, encouraging audiences to “conduct a brainstorm session with 3-5
persons” and “develop a task description in verb-noun form.”

While built upon other works, the book is not afraid to contradict its sources or share its own wisdom.

For example, it deviates from the PMBOK to discuss the importance of emotional intelligence in project managers, and from standard project management advice by recommending that project kickoff meetings be conducted after the planning phase rather than before it. But these unique recommendations are the exception rather than the rule in a book with a general dearth of original insights. In addition, the book’s rapid-fire pace risks giving complex topics short shrift, as
when conflict resolution is handled in a few paragraphs and reasons for project failure are handled in a mere three pages. Clunky language also detracts from the book’s delivery, as with “for those who are wondering if the Apollo project is successful, the safe landing date for all three astronauts Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins was July 24, 1969.”

“Simple“ Project Management is a streamlined guide through the basics of project management.


HANNAH PEARSON (August 19, 2024)

Disclosure: This article is not an endorsement, but a review. The publisher of this book provided free copies of the book and paid a small fee to
have their book reviewed by a professional reviewer. Foreword Reviews and Clarion Reviews make no guarantee that the publisher will receive a
positive review. Foreword Magazine, Inc. is disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255.

Popular posts from this blog

Time Management or is it really Project Management?

We have been told since young by others that in order to do something well, we need to have good time management.  As one who leads projects for a living who knows a thing or two about this, I will say that time management is a fallacy.  Purely speaking, time management  (just like managing people) refers to managing time in which we control time, i.e. we can accelerate it (to make it go faster), slow it down, or to stop time. We can do this with a lot of things but we cannot manage time - it continues to chug along, whether we like it or not. If you were to ask me the time and my answer is, say 9:00am, that time is already gone because it is 9:01am when you continue with what you are doing.  Time is like a freight train or a subway that we can only latch on to and hope we can do things within the allotted time. Ask the student who needs to submit the paper at 11:59pm Sunday night or the employee who need to submit the report Mon morning 9:00am.  In truth, what ...

The Mental You - Reducing Stress part 2

Just like there are always 2 sides to each story (the good and the bad), we can tackle issues in 2 ways - either head on or perhaps we can do something opposite altogether. The previous post is primarily concerned on how to overcome stress by reducing it. Another way is to focus on something totally unrelated to stress. So, rather than looking at fixing the bad, we focus on the good such that there is little room for the bad.  Let's work on this together... Positive Thinking  What do you see if you turn on the news, or start looking at social media? More often than not, aside from the beautiful people and cute cats, the news is mostly gloom and doom. There are wars and rumors of wars, climate change due to global warming causing floods, and other disasters, earthquakes at various parts of the world. So, it's no uncommon for us to no longer see the world in rose-tinted glasses but glasses with murky lenses. And yet, to reduce stress, this is the one thing we must do - to think ...

Parenting

How did you do it? This question has been asked by many of my friends and colleagues when they found out about my children. We had initially thought that what we went through is typical. But as we talked to more and more people, it is only then we realized that the journey is not so common after all.  Singapore has been ranked amongst the top countries in the world by PISA, short for the Program for International Student Assessment that is under the OECD umbrella. In some years, it is actually ranked number 1. In other words, to be able to get through the Singapore education system is difficult enough as it is.  The Journey to College  By the grace of God, both my kids did well in the system by being selected into the Gifted Education Program (GEP) - for the top 1% of students - and then getting into Raffles Institution (supposedly the number 1 school in Singapore), and achieving straight As in the Singapore-GCE Cambridge "A" levels, and then receiving offers from a few o...