https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/opm/issue/feedOrganisational Project Management2015-09-17T18:59:59+10:00Professor Shankar SankaranShankar.Sankaran@uts.edu.auOpen Journal Systems<p><strong>This journal is no longer accepting submissions. It ceased publication in November, 2016 and is now a UTS ePRESS Archived Title. This Journal has been superceded at UTS ePRESS by the Journal <a href="https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/pmrp"> Project Management Research and Practice.</a> Submissions can be made to Project Management Research and Practice</strong></p> <p>Organisational Project Management will publish peer reviewed scholarly articles - qualitative, quantitative and mixed-methods research papers as well as theoretical and exploratory papers - covering the many and varied aspects of organisational project management. In order to link theory with practice it also publishes original and innovative practice papers which are reviewed for relevance to practitioners by members of the editorial board. From time to time the journal also publishes opinion pieces on contemporary issues or topics of interest to its readers and book reviews. Since the journal is published online it is able to incorporate multimedia content in its publications.<br><br>The journal aims to cover all aspects of organisational project management including (but not limited to) linking strategy to projects, change management, governance, leadership, innovation, project marketing, maturity models, and also how projects are managed in different types of organizations such as private, public and community organizations.</p> <p>Although the journal 'Organisational Project Management' (OPM) is being published for the first time in 2014 it is an evolution from its predecessor <a href="/journals/index.php/pppm">'The Journal of Project Program and Portfolio Management'</a> (JPPPM) which started its publication in 2010 as the first Open Acces Journal in Project Management by UTS ePRESS.</p> <p><strong>This journal does not charge any type of article processing charge (APC) or any type of article submission charge.</strong> </p> <div> <a href="https://doajournals.wordpress.com/2015/06/11/doaj-seal-is-now-live-on-the-site/"><img src="https://d6vn5uj5sr4f6.cloudfront.net/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/doaj_seal_logo_medium.png" alt=""></a></div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div><a href="https://doaj.org/toc/2203-6156">https://doaj.org/toc/2203-6156 </a></div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div> </div>https://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/opm/article/view/4402Call for Papers – Special issue: Project Management in the Non-Profit Sector2015-09-17T18:59:59+10:00Shankar Sankaranshankar.sankaran@uts.edu.auThis journal special issue will explore diverse stakeholder perspectives and share examples of project management practices in the non-profit sector. Key objectives are to develop understandings of project management practice in the sector, to examine how cross-sectoral collaboration and learning can help non-profit organisations achieve their project and programme objectives, and to explore ways in which the wider project management community can learn from experiences in the non-profit sector.2015-04-12T10:20:44+10:00Copyright (c) 2015 Shankar Sankaranhttps://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/opm/article/view/4274A study of project management knowledge and sustainable outcomes in Thailand’s reproductive health projects2015-09-17T18:59:51+10:00Jantanee Dumrakjantanee.dumrak@tua.edu.auBassam BarroudiSam.Baroudi@unisa.edu.auStephen PullenStephen.Pullen@unisa.edu.au<p align="left">In Thailand, numerous reproductive health projects funded by both national and international agencies have been established in an attempt to mitigate reproductive health problems. Solving problems on reproductive health projects that only have temporary funding requires effective project management that hopefully leads to better long-term desired outcomes. This paper identifies the association between collaborative reproductive health (CRH) project management and sustainable outcomes. The Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK<sup>® </sup>Guide) is employed to benchmark project management practices on four CRH projects in Thailand. The research methodology presented in this paper comprises of content analysis and questionnaire survey. It is evident that limited use of certain project management knowledge areas (PMKAs) affects CRH project implementation and success. The association between the use of PMKAs and sustainable outcomes on these projects is also presented. Scope, integration and quality management were found to be the most influential PMKAs for sustainable outcomes on CRH projects. Nevertheless, the projects showed a shortage of project management processes for PMKAs that were required to attain the outcomes. </p>2015-05-12T14:27:50+10:00Copyright (c) 2015 Jantanee Dumrak, Bassam Barroudi, Stephen Pullenhttps://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/opm/article/view/4272Complexity in the Context of Information Systems Project Management2015-09-17T18:59:47+10:00Alexei Botchkarevalbot@ieee.orgPatrick FinniganPatrick_Finnigan@ieee.org<p>Complexity is an inherent attribute of any project. The purpose of defining and documenting complexity is to enable a project team to foresee resulting challenges in a timely manner, and take steps to alleviate them.</p><p>The main contribution of this article is to present a systematic view of complexity in project management by identifying its key attributes and classifying complexity by these attributes. A “complexity taxonomy” is developed and discussed within three levels: the product, the project and the external environment.</p><p>Complexity types are described through simple real-life examples. Then a framework (tool) is developed for applying the notion of complexity as an early warning tool.</p><p>The article is intended for researchers in complexity, project management, information systems, technology solutions and business management, and also for information specialists, project managers, program managers, financial staff and technology directors.</p>2015-06-27T00:00:00+10:00Copyright (c) 2015 Alexei Botchkarev, Patrick Finniganhttps://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/opm/article/view/4401Understanding the divide between the theory and practice of organisational change2015-09-17T18:59:55+10:00Julien Pollackjulien.pollack@uts.edu.au<p>This paper reviews the different ways that academics and practitioners write about and discuss change management, to develop an understanding of whether there is a divide between the theory and practice of change management. This research used scientometric research techniques to compare three corpora: one based on the most cited research in the general management literature on change management; one based on the most cited research in specialist change management journals; and one based on interviews with practising change managers.</p><p>It was found that the general management literature emphasised an abstract understanding of knowledge management and the learning organisation, while the change management literature focused more on issues associated with value, culture and social identity. The practitioners emphasised issues at the individual, project and team levels, the need for the effective use of targeted communication to achieve organisational change objectives, and the value of rapidly identifying key drivers in a new context. This research found significant differences between these three corpora, which lends support to other researchers’ claims of a divide between theory and practice in change management.</p><p> </p>2015-07-01T05:05:14+10:00Copyright (c) 2015 Julien Pollackhttps://epress.lib.uts.edu.au/journals/index.php/opm/article/view/4142The IT project manager competencies that impact project success – A qualitative research2015-09-17T18:59:43+10:00Cíntia Cristina Silva de Araújocintyaraujo@gmail.comCristiane Drebes Pedroncdpedron@gmail.comSince there is a lack of studies about the relationship of IT project manager competencies and project success, this paper will address the following research question: Which competencies should IT project managers develop in order to achieve success in IT projects? To answer this question, we conducted a qualitative research with an exploratory approach. To collect data, twelve (12) in-depth interviews were done with Brazilian project managers from different companies from several business sectors. The analysis results pointed out that for our respondents the most needed category of competencies are team management, business domain knowledge, communication, project management and people skills. As other authors have affirmed, technical skills were considered to be less relevant to project success than interpersonal and intrapersonal competencies.2015-07-09T22:51:29+10:00Copyright (c) 2015 Cíntia Cristina Silva de Araújo, Cristiane Drebes Pedron