The Evolution
of Project Management
By Beki Grant and Kymberly
Kelly (UoPhx 2009)
“Project management provides people with a powerful set of tools that
improves their ability to plan, implement, and manage activities to
accomplish specific organizational objectives” (Gray and Larson, 2006,
p. 3). Throughout history, project management played an important role
from the pyramids of Egypt to present day. This paper discusses the
changes and evolution of project management and the changes project
management may encounter.
The Pyramids
Project management predates the building of
the pyramids. Like the Red Pyramid of Dashur, The Great Pyramid of Giza
is not a unique structure even though it may be on a grander scale (Coppens,
2007). The Egyptians intricately built the Great Pyramid using the most
modern methods of the times with great precision and detail. Looking at
the building of the Great Pyramid through a project management
perspective one can see many obstacles that probably caused great effort
to overcome. Coppens (2007) states that the workforce was the most
obvious problem, followed by the engineering plans, and then the
originality of the King’s chambers that was built with granite. Granite
was difficult to mine, requiring an hour to cut only one inch. King’s
chamber was built using with granite that was mined over 400 miles away
(Coppens, 2007).
The Great Pyramid took roughly 20 years to
complete and employed 10,000 people, because these employees had to
bring families with them. The women kept the base camp running by
cooking for the men and the children (Coppens, 2007).
The outside of the pyramid made with limestone
and gypsum was easier to mold than the granite. Using primitive tools of
copper, the men cut huge blocks of stone then hauled them around the
inclines built for pushing and dragging the blocks into place. Coppens
(2007) raises a valid point that whatever building materials needed to
make the Great Pyramid, such as the sloping inclines, had to also be
dismantled when complete.
Medieval
Fast-forwarding a few centuries brings the
world to a new place where fortified castles are the norm. Chillingham
Castle in North Umberland, United Kingdom brought about a new era for
project managers. Project managers were simply construction workers with
an idea of how to build a fortified stronghold against enemy advances.
Chillingham Castle was first a stronghold during the 12th century and
became an actual castle in 1344 (Chillingham Castle, 2008). The castle
remained unchanged since the addition to make the building a fortified,
medieval castle. Chillingham was a strategic stronghold on the border
between England and Scotland and saw many bloody battles (Chillingham
Castle, 2008).
The project manager in the medieval times who
designed castles had to know how to fortifiy strongholds. Angela Doland
(2006), traveled to France to see new construction of a modern day
European castle using medieval construction practices. Doland (2006)
stated that her tour showed exactly how small architectural elements
deterred invaders. Staircases winding clockwise would force a
sword-wielding assailant to use his left hand, thereby making him
awkward and clumsy. In the same realm, at the top of stairs, a low
hanging door would force the aggressor to duck his head. This allowed
the defender of the castle to swing his own sword downward onto the back
of the neck, cutting off the invader’s head (Doland, 2006). Large steps
on staircases would force the attacker to take off chain male and armor,
or seriously slow the attacker down making him vulnerable to the
protector of the stronghold (Doland, 2006).
19th Century
In the 19th century, the architects and
construction workers separatated Architects developed building designs
and sometimes oversaw the building of the project. Building design
during this time was considered an art and most of the builders were
lowly construction workers. The the functionality of the building became
important during the industrial revolution. Factories and workers needed
big spaces for goods and machinery.
Walker (2007) writes about the distinctions
and separations, which arose during that time in the construction world.
Architects and builders, and architects and engineers, or surveyors, had
a rift that banned everyone from working together as a unit through
various guilds and organizations. Walker (2007) continues by stating
that the lack of organization through the giant rift did not help to
stimulate the economy for building projects. During this time, though
technology was progressing tremendously, the tools to complete projects
remained fairly the same (Ill Institute for Research, 2000). The
realization of the need for someone to organize and take charge of the
projects began and took the form of a master builder. The master builder
became the overseer of the project yet still helped to build (Ill
Institute for Research, 2000). The Ill Institute for Research (2000)
also states that the master builders, or early project managers, could
read and write, do arithmetic and were forerunners of a new era that now
incorporates business, finance, and managerial skills.
20th Century
Taylor and Gantt
The 20th century saw enormous changes in
project management. Frederick Taylor (the Father of Industrial
Engineering) and Henry Gantt played an important role in the study of
projects. Taylor used the reasoning of breaking down the elements of a
process to improve productivity by eliminating extra movement within
tasks. Before the process, productivity came from the workers working
longer hours. Gantt, on the other hand, created a technique (Gantt
chart) of outlining the sequence and duration of tasks (Kozak-Holland,
2008). Project managers still use the proven Gantt chart in modern
project management, and many project-management software packages use
the Gantt chart.
Mass Production and Human Relations
The second industrial revolution introduced
electricity and combustion engines that brought about new technologies
such as electrical devices that helped with mass production. During the
First World War the ability to mass-produce became more important and
drove an acceleration in planning and supplying due to the mass
production, transportation, and the movement of armies as never before (Kozak-Holland,
2008). After the First World War, new human relations developed in the
work arena between employee and employer.
Project engineers developed or adapted
coordination techniques that gave the project managers more control over
the progress of the projects. However, the project management techniques
did not attempt to dictate technological methods to specialized experts.
(Kozak-Holland, 2008, para. 17).
The Empire State Building Project
The Empire State Building is a testament of
precise project management in the early 20th century. Due to a
competition between General Motors’ executive John J. Raskob and Walter
Chrysler to construct the world’s tallest building, the Empire State
Building became a wonder of construction project management. Starrett
Brothers and Eken were the general contractors and started with no
equipment for the job. Instead, they designed and purchased custom
equipment needed due to the massive scope of the project. Once the
project was completed, they sold the equipment and credited the
investors (Construction Company.com, 2009).
Starrett Brothers and Eken created a tight
schedule that included 60 different types of trade people. They ordered
supplies to specifications and made them at the plants. The contractors
hired dependable companies to provide quality and adhere to the
schedule. Tasks were scheduled to the minute and some tasks overlapped
so as not to waste time. Overlapping of tasks became the first
commercial construction project to use the fast-track technique, which
consisted of starting construction before designs were completed. In
January 1930, excavation of the new building started before the
demolition of the current building was complete (Construction
Company.com, 2009).
In March 1930, the contractors began
construction on the steel frame. The contractors built four and a half
stores a week by using innovations that saved time and resources. Some
people believe that the steel posts arrived with markings of their place
in the framework and the number of the derrick that would put the steel
in place (Construction Company.com, 2009).
On April 11, 1931, construction was complete.
The project took 3,500 men and seven million hours. The Empire State
Building completed ahead of schedule by three months and under budget by
$18.3 million (Construction Company.com, 2009).
Modern Project Management
The third industrial revolution introduced
computers, the Internet, and management practices. The 1950s witnessed
the development of the Critical Path Method (CPM) and Program Evaluation
and Review Technique (PERT), which gave greater control to project
managers. In 1955, the US military invented PERT to determine the time
it takes to complete a task and identify the minimum time it takes to
complete a project. In 1957, the DuPont Corporation created CPM to
handle various tasks and interactions of a project by incorporating
algorithms to set project activities. The US Defense also introduced
project tools such as the work breakdown structure that organizes the
scope of a project by grouping the project’s work elements (Construction
Company.com, 2009).
In the 1970s, project management became widely
used. The Project Management Institute (PMI) was created to focus on
project techniques, and the introduction of Time, Cost, and Quality and
how they tie together to determine the expected value of the project
output (Construction Company.com, 2009). The 1980s saw the incorporation
of risk management to project management, which helps determine the risk
associated with the project. Total Quality Management also introduced at
this time, is a business management strategy to incorporate quality
within processes (Wikipedia, 2009). PMI also publishes a project
management guide called the PM Book of Knowledge. The 1990s introduced
certifications of project management and focused on managing networks of
projects and business benefits (Construction Company.com, 2009).
21st Century
The future of project management will see
changes. One area of concern is risk management and the need of
insurance to cover the risks encountered. More than ever, companies must
protect themselves from the risk of delayed productions and unforeseen
accidents. New lines of risk management insurance such as the General
Contractor’s Pollution Legal Liability have increased over the last
decade. Developing new insurance products may increase to handle future
liability exposures. Risk management controls can help project a
positive perception by carrying insurance at acceptable levels, and
developing procedures to address scheduling, safety, and quality for
each project (XL Capital Ltd, 2009).
Another change in project management may be
with the instruction of project management. New innovative techniques
have gained popularity. One new technique is the 4D virtual construction
technology, which allows the user to use 3D graphic models in a
time-lapsed sequence of events, virtually allowing a project to grow
without physically building the project (Park and Meier, 2007). The 4D
virtual construction technology does have some drawbacks and maybe the
future can remedy the drawbacks or progress the idea to improved
techniques.
Conclusion
Project management has a long
history and created amazing projects. From the great pyramids to modern
buildings, project management continually improved and created new
techniques. The last few decades introduced new ways of approaching
project management and the future will bring about new ways of thinking.
References
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