Thursday, March 28, 2024

The latest news from the world of project management

How to fail well...

Failure Is the new success. Here are five ways that you can embrace...

5 Skills Needed To...

Why do projects fail? It's a question that invites a lot of interest and...

Embrace the change: Getting...

New IT systems for a growing business can be an exciting prospect and...

Does a Project Manager...

What makes a successful project manager is a combination of their academic abilities,...
HomeGeneralPraxis Framework published...

Praxis Framework published by APM

As the need for rounded project management professionals becomes even greater, a new publication aims to guide individuals and organisations through the confusing landscape on the journey to becoming a true professional.

With Praxis Framework: An integrated guide to the management of projects, programmes and portfolios, author Adrian Dooley draws the best from recognised guides already available to create a single, integrated approach to the four key platforms of project management knowledge, methods, competency and capability maturity.

With many years’  experience in training and developing project managers and working with organisations wanting to improve their project delivery, Dooley recognised that there was considerable frustration and confusion over the variety of guides, tools and techniques all aimed at creating the ‘professional’ but using different language and terminology.  This created a professional jigsaw of pieces that didn’t fit together.

An Honorary Fellow of the Association for Project Management (APM), he was also the lead author on the recently published APM Body of Knowledge 6th Edition.

“I had long felt there was a need to harmonise, rationalise and integrate the principles contained in guides such as the APM Body of Knowledge, PRINCE2, ISO21500, MSP, MoP, P3M3, OPM3 and others.

“Working on the APM Body of Knowledge 6th Edition entailed bringing together disparate topics from many different contributors and make them speak with one voice and in one language. That was half the job of creating a common framework so I set about re-writing others in a common and consistent style,” he explained.

Because it draws from a variety of sources as well as those of APM, the contribution of Praxis Framework is recognised by the association as so significant it is publishing the hard copy version the interests of furthering professional discussion and debate and to complement its own range of qualifications, publications and memberships.

Writing in the foreword, the APM says: “As a way of reaching ever greater heights of success and meeting the needs of a complex and ever changing world, all professions aim to first define and then master their professional arena. This begins with a process of discussion and debate, to challenge existing norms and assumptions.

“The Praxis Framework aims to trigger just such a debate within the project management profession and will hopefully encourage more organisations to take a holistic approach to improving their capability maturity,  contributing to APM’s strategy for 2020 where ‘all projects succeed’.”

To purchase a copy of Praxis Framework please visit the APM website

 

 

Related Posts

Continue reading

Praxis launches free capability maturity tool

Capability maturity assessments are often done once or twice a year to check on how an organisation is performing and hopefully to improve project and programmes delivery . But between assessments, organisations can suffer a loss of focus on the things that need...

New comparative glossary from Praxis

Praxis, the free on-line framework for managing projects, programmes and portfolios, has now launched its comparative glossary of P3 Management terms. The first edition compares and explains terminology from PRINCE2TM, the PMBoK® guide, ISO21500, the APM Body of Knowledge...

Why do we still teach Maslow?

This question was recently asked in a LinkedIn forum. It went on to say that Maslow was ‘disproven in the 1950s’ so we should not continue to teach it. In case you didn’t know. Maslow’s ‘hierarchy of needs’ is a...