Comments on: Time to drop quality from project management https://www.projectaccelerator.co.uk/time-to-drop-quality-from-project-management/ The latest project management news, views and project management sites from the around the world Fri, 25 Jul 2014 20:31:38 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 By: Project Management News, July 25 2014, Vorex Project Management Roundup https://www.projectaccelerator.co.uk/time-to-drop-quality-from-project-management/comment-page-1/#comment-272 Fri, 25 Jul 2014 20:31:38 +0000 https://projectaccelerator.co.uk/time-to-drop-quality-from-project-management/#comment-272 […] Time to Drop Quality from Project Management […]

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By: Paul Naybour https://www.projectaccelerator.co.uk/time-to-drop-quality-from-project-management/comment-page-1/#comment-271 Mon, 07 Jul 2014 15:32:11 +0000 https://projectaccelerator.co.uk/time-to-drop-quality-from-project-management/#comment-271 In reply to Ruth Murray-Webster.

Ruth

Thanks for spending the time to stop and post..you list of names made me smile. I must have missed the specialism bit unless it was the infrastructure projects label. We must catch up soon.

Paul

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By: Ruth Murray-Webster https://www.projectaccelerator.co.uk/time-to-drop-quality-from-project-management/comment-page-1/#comment-270 Thu, 26 Jun 2014 11:10:12 +0000 https://projectaccelerator.co.uk/time-to-drop-quality-from-project-management/#comment-270 This topic is close to my heart given my career in quality management and risk management as well as project management. Here’s a blog I posted last month that is relevant.

Risk, Quality, Value – surely it’s all about management?

Back in 1998 I started working with a project management consultancy (PMProfessional) where I learned lots and made firm friends and colleagues – Peter Simon, David Hillson, Michel Thiry, Julia Johnson, Paul Naybour… to name just a few of from that era.

One of the things that used to really bemuse (and sometimes frustrate) me was the rush for a specialism. I was introduced to risk specialists, and value specialists, and I was hailed to be a quality specialist. I never quite got it because for me managing risk and quality and value is just part of management (and doing this in a project context is just part of project management). But – I bowed to the trend and joined in with the intention of becoming a specialist in a few of the boxes that had been defined.

I was reminded of this today as I was sitting on the train catching up with magazine from professional bodies of which I’m a member. I’m a Chartered Quality Professional and Member of the Institute of Risk Management.

In Quality World (April 2014) there is much anticipation of ISO9001: 2015 which is going to have a much greater focus on risk-based quality, i.e. balancing risk and reward. Of course, for me, preventive action in ISO9001: 2008 is all about risk analysis and management (what risks to quality exists and how will we managed them), but a yet greater integration of risk with quality is good.

In RMProfessional (Spring 2014), there is a great article that continues a theme I’ve pursued for some time about integrating risk thinking with normal managerial decision-making, but this article goes further to suggest better integration of risk with management systems, such as ISO9001: 2015.

Hurray! I’ve decided that I’ll never beat the separation of these disciplines – the market to ‘professionalise’ them is too great – and there is much good done by these professional bodies. But I’ll keep on pushing that for me, it’s about management and sensible integration of a few basis ideas about achieving objectives and keeping variation in achieving them inside tolerable limits.

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