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Rating:  Summary: It's what I was looking for Review: I have worked in a lot of projects, large and small, but all the ones I personally managed were small and run by the S.O.P.M Methodology (Seat-of-the-Pants). When I signed up for a community-college P.M. class, all they wanted to talk about was "soft skills", team bonding, Kum-Bah-Yah stuff. Necessary, but not the nuts-and-bolts. I got my money back - I wanted meat-and-potatoes Project Managment. To me, this book has a good overview of basics with common sense, then some good specific techniques with more detail. Plus, it goes cradle-to-grave. I have not finished, and I have not run the exercises yet. Maybe I'll come back and add a different rating after that. I wouldn't buy it to learn Microsoft Project software.
Rating:  Summary: It doesn't stink Review: This book has project management examples for use with MS Project 4.0 included. The macros don't work in the current version of MS Project. The macros are written in Visual Basic and I was able to debug through them, so I could at least install the material. The book was not well written, the narrators came across too stuffy. There is good material here, but I am having a hard time forcing myself past the middle of the book. I enjoyed the AMA Handbook of Project Management much better.
Rating:  Summary: Recent (1995) strong high-level view of project management Review: Well developed description of high-level procedures necessary to the process of "planning to plan." CD includes exercises thatcan be used with MS Project 4.0, but the book is not tied to anyparticular program and is definitely not a software manual
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