The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper

The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper

  • ISBN13: 9780470052372
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

The One-Page Project Manager shows you how to boil down any project into a simple, one-page document that can be used to communicate all essential details to upper management, other departments, suppliers, and audiences. This practical guide will save time and effort, helping you identify the vital parts of a project and communicate those parts and duties to other team members.

Rating: (out of 40 reviews)

List Price: $ 19.95

Price: $ 9.91

How To Cheat At IT Project Management - processes
US $22.00
End Date: Monday Feb-06-2012 9:03:52 PST
Buy It Now for only: US $22.00
Buy it now | Add to watch list
Information Technology Project Management by Marchewka 2 ED
US $39.85
End Date: Monday Feb-06-2012 9:04:38 PST
Buy It Now for only: US $39.85
Buy it now | Add to watch list

More Project Management Products

Share
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

5 Responses to “The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper”

  1. Joseph T. Dager says:

    Review by Joseph T. Dager for The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper
    Rating:
    Developed my own 1 page project manager and have been using it for the last several years but it never felt complete. Kept searching and even tried to get the publisher and Campbell to release a book to me earlier with no success. I received and read the book on Monday, defaced it on Tuesday and was using the form by Tuesday afternoon. Re-read the book Tuesday night. The book is an easy read, does not try to re-teach me project management but explains the use of the form. The 1 page project manager is right on target. It is better than mine! The simplicity makes it easy for non-professional and begining project managers to use but when used by seasoned veterans for its reporting aspect it will be truly appreciated.

    Recommend it to anyone, but beware like all plans it is in the implementation of them that makes them succesful, not in the form itself. That is why the simplicity of a single page works.

  2. Nathan Carpenter says:

    Review by Nathan Carpenter for The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper
    Rating:
    I purchased this book due to the overwhelmingly positive responses… While the actual concept and some of the underlying principles are pretty solid, there are a few things that detract from this book.

    First of all, the font is about 14pt Times New Roman, which adds to the sense of this book being fluffed. Contributing to this feeling, is the fact that the author continually attempts to provide credibility to himself by mentioning O.C. Tanner, and the “various” projects he’s worked on (for which he uses the same five examples ad nauseam). Essentially, he continues to justify why he’s qualified to be telling you anything, while dropping the occasional “teaser” about the form you’ll be using for the first FOUR CHAPTERS.

    The absolutely most irritating aspect of this book, however, is that he’s continually trying to sell it to you. In chapter one, he introduces an acronym for “The One Page Project Manager,” viz. OPPM. He then proceeds to NEVER use it. Then, he mentions “The One Page Project Manager,” so much that if I hear it again, I might end up incarcerated. On page 29, even with 14pt font, he manages to use “The One Page Project Manager” SEVEN times. I’m sure that my few mentions of that heinous term have already provoked certain ire. And by not using the acronym, he ensures that the term is too lengthy to conveniently skip while reading.

    Chapter 5 comprises the bulk of the book (being some 100 pages in length – a shocking dichotomy from the previous 12-20 page chapters). Presumably where the “meat” is, it’s filled with stuffing in the form of multiple OPPM’s, with only the slightest difference between any of them.

    To his credit, the concept is good, I think it will work (that’s why I purchased the book). But Mr. Clark Campbell needs to realize that he doesn’t have to sell his book during the first four chapters, as I already bought it.

    2 stars for utility. -3 stars for absolute aggravation.

  3. Paul Germeraad says:

    Review by Paul Germeraad for The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper
    Rating:
    This is the most productive method I’ve seen to capture the essence of project management. Not too complicated, not too simple. For those with experience this is certainly a method to adopt for rapid, vivid, and persistent communication. I wish I’d had this years ago, but am glad it came along now. It clearly save time for an organization’s key resources.

  4. J. Beebe says:

    Review by J. Beebe for The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper
    Rating:
    This book is essentially a 4-5 page instruction manual to go along with a reporting spreadsheet, which has been stretched out to a 129 page book using large font, small pages, lots of white space, and repetitive figures/screen shots. The tool itself makes some sense as a nice concise report format, but the book goes on and on puffing up its abilities and the author’s creativity. Some 20 or so pages are filled up by showing the sheet with a section empty, and then full; empty, and then full, as if the user (having already been told where to put info and seen screen shots of the sections in question) can’t figure out how to fill in the blanks.

    I found disconcerting that the image on the cover is a “modified” version of the tool they’re describing, undermining the claim that this tool is well-suited for any project. If that’s the case, why wouldn’t they feature the basic form on the cover, rather than a customized version?

    It seems like the tool could be useful to improve communication and management of projects, but the communication discussed is primarily bottom-up. The book barely touches upon how it can be used for top-down communication or how to use this to work with areas that are falling behind or going over budget. So, it’s not really so much a “manager” as a “status report”.

    If you’re looking for a simple read and a simple tool for tracking your team’s progress, check this out of a library. It’s not worth the money to actually buy a copy. If you’re hoping to actually learn some useful project management skills, look elsewhere.

  5. Frank Luby says:

    Review by Frank Luby for The One-Page Project Manager: Communicate and Manage Any Project With a Single Sheet of Paper
    Rating:
    If you’ve ever needed to manage several projects at once, you know the dilemma: there has to be a better way to track the projects quickly, concisely and reliably, but finding and learning that better way always seems too tedious, costly, or complicated. This book solves that problem.

    We’re rolling out the tool in my firm and we’ve been impressed with how easy it is to use and how much useful information it communicates, even for complex, lengthy projects. It’s intuitive and there are no bells and whistles and no overkill. Highly recommended.

Leave a Reply

Powered by Yahoo! Answers