2.1 Project Phases and the Project Life Cycle | 2.2 Project Stakeholders | 2.3 Organizational Influences | 2.4 Key General Management Skills | 2.5 Social-Economic- Environmental Influences |
Integration | Scope | Time | Cost | Quality | Resource | Communications | Risk | Procurement |
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Project stakeholders are individuals and organizations who are actively involved in
the project, or whose interests may be positively or negatively affected as a result of
project execution or project completion; they may also exert influence over the project and
its results. The project management team
must identify the stakeholders, determine their requirements,
and then manage and influence those expectations to ensure a successful project.
Stakeholder identification is often especially difficult. For example, is an
assembly-line worker whose future employment depends on the outcome of a new
product-design project a stakeholder?
In addition to these there are many different names and categories of project
stakeholders—internal and external, owners and funders, sellers and contractors,
team members and their families, government agencies and media outlets, individual
citizens, temporary or permanent lobbying organizations, and society at large.
The naming or grouping of stakeholders is primarily an aid to identifying which
individuals and organizations view themselves as stakeholders. Stakeholder roles and
responsibilities may overlap, as when an engineering firm provides financing for a
plant it is designing.
Managing stakeholder expectations may be difficult because stakeholders often
have very different objectives that may come into conflict. For example:
In general, differences between or among stakeholders should be resolved in favor
of the customer. This does not, however, mean that the needs and expectations of other
stakeholders can or should be disregarded. Finding appropriate resolutions to such
differences can be one of the major challenges of project management.
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