From project management to team integration: Key issues in the management of the human resource in projects

Shy Ravid, Avraham Shtub, Anat Rafaeli, Ella Glikson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The non-repetitive nature of projects, globalization, the growing number of distributed project teams, and the substantial number of high-tech projects in which the human brain is the most important resource are just few of the forces making human resource management in projects a critical success factor. These conditions challenge not only project team members' ability to collaborate, but also the capacity of the project manager to effectively manage human resources and to facilitate a collaborative work environment. The quantitative aspects of project management, such as scheduling, budgeting, and resource management, are supported by a large array of tools and techniques, many of them based on operations research methodologies and integrated into commercially available software for project management. However, these commercial software packages for project management offer very little support for the development and management of project teams. In this monograph we review the project management and organizational behavior literature, focusing on key issues in the management of human resources in projects. We then present a model that relates the use of integrative project management tools and techniques to the development of a shared understanding in teams, and to the occurrence of effective team processes. From a practical point of view, we present team integration - the process by which the goals and work processes of individual team members are assembled into a coordinated whole - as an important success factor. With the art and science of human resource management in projects growing increasingly important in today's global high-tech environment, we cannot ignore the gap between the needs of project managers and the tools available to support their efforts. Our model offers an approach toward overcoming this gap. We present some recent results of our research that support elements of this model, and also point to a new direction - the use of simulators to develop a shared understanding among project team members and to achieve team integration early in the project initiation phase. The results of our efforts to develop such tool - the Project Team Builder - are reported as well.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)89-160
Number of pages72
JournalFoundations and Trends in Technology, Information and Operations Management
Volume6
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2012
Externally publishedYes

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