Research into any profession is the key to uncovering trends and understanding how to improve results. The following project management research reports, grouped by topic, have been published by Procept Associates Ltd. or third parties. Click on the buttons to download or view the reports.
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Enabling Organizational Change through Strategic Initiatives Successful implementation of strategic initiatives is critical for organizations to enable sustainable change. Those that are highly effective at change management demonstrate three practices that improve performance and give them a competitive advantage. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: The High Cost of Low Performance — The Essential Role of Communications According to 55 percent of project managers, effective communication to all stakeholders is the most critical success factor in project management. Get the hard numbers behind this soft skill. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Navigating Complexity As organizations act within a challenging and changing environment, their strategies — and the projects to implement them — are becoming more complex. Budgets on average are larger and so are the funds at risk. Uncover the three strategic competencies that high-performing organizations exhibit. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Capturing the Value of Project Management through Decision Making Poor decisions have negative consequences to both outcomes and the bottom line. However, when organizations approach decision making with discipline, 79 percent more projects meet original goals and intent, 110 percent more are completed within budget, and 128 percent more are completed on schedule. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Capturing the Value of Project Management through Knowledge Transfer When organizations value knowledge transfer and implement good practices to support it, they improve project outcomes substantially — by nearly 35 percent. Although specific practices vary among organizations, the most effective organizations report adhering to a five-step method for identifying, capturing, sharing, applying and assessing knowledge. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Capturing the Value of Project Management through Organizational Agility When organizations create a culture of agility enabling projects and programs — their most strategic initiatives — to be completed ever-faster and more efficiently, they are better positioned to thrive in uncertain economic conditions. Organizations can accomplish this by establishing a framework around strategy, culture, leadership, people, and process. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Portfolio Management Portfolio management improves efficiency, increases ROI and decreases risk. Here’s a look at how organizations can improve their own portfolio practices through three broad best practices. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: The Impact of PMOs on Strategy Implementation By supporting the implementation of strategic programs, PMOs can play a crucial role in delivering organizational value. To do so, PMOs must themselves become more strategic and focus on value delivery. |
|
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: PMO Frameworks Benchmark your PMO against the most common types including areas of responsibility and focus. |
PMI's Industry Growth Forecast: Project Management Between 2010 + 2020 Through 2020, 1.57 million new project management jobs will be created every year around the world. Professionals and job-seekers with project management skills are in a prime position to benefit. |
|
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: The Competitive Advantage of Effective Talent Management High-performing organizations are more successful because they emphasize strategy, improve efficiency and — perhaps most tellingly — cultivate talent resources that embrace these practices to deliver successful programs and projects. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Requirements Management — A Core Competency for Project and Program Success Organizations waste US$51 million for every US$1 billion spent on projects and programs due to poor requirements management. By changing their culture to one that values effective requirements management — and has the people and processes to support it — organizations can slow the trend towards failed projects and lost revenue. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Executive Sponsor Engagement — Top Driver of Project and Program Success Effective executive sponsorship is critical to the success of an organization’s strategic initiatives, and active engagement by executive sponsors is the top driver of project and program success. Yet sponsors are assigned to fewer than two-thirds of projects. This situation results in significant losses for organizations, but there are some simple solutions. |
PMI's Pulse of the Profession: Capturing the Value of Project Management (2015) 2015 Pulse reveals that organizations benefit by returning to the basics of project, program and portfolio management. By focusing on the fundamental aspects of developing a culture of project management, cultivating talent and defining processes, organizations will capture value and gain competitive advantage. |