• DocumentCode
    570779
  • Title

    Managing complexity in technology intensive projects

  • Author

    Haider, Waqar ; Haider, Abrar

  • Author_Institution
    Center for Adv. Studies in Eng., Islamabad, Pakistan
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    July 29 2012-Aug. 2 2012
  • Firstpage
    2419
  • Lastpage
    2426
  • Abstract
    As businesses operate in increasingly more complex environments, understanding complexity and its sources is becoming increasingly important. These sources range from internal organizational culture to, technical and social environment in which the business operates, to the competitive dynamics aimed at capturing and maximizing market share. The increasing unpredictability and complexity of unforeseen competitive consequences call for novel methods of planning, execution, and management of business. As organizations confront these changes and attempt to adapt to them, they find that management of technology intensive projects can no longer be viewed as a linear process of planned actions. In these project change agents self organize to accomplish pre-determined goals based on the feedback, emerging circumstances, and to cope with future uncertainty. This process of self organization results in organizational evolution and growth based on generative learning that facilitates continuous improvement through action oriented learnings. In doing so, this increased complexity results in complex adaptive systems increasingly evolving throughout the organization and creating unpredictable changes operating between stability and instability. This paper tackles the issue complexity management in technology intensive projects. It particularly focuses on elements of complexity; role of project managers; and tools, techniques, and models for managing complexities in projects.
  • Keywords
    competitive intelligence; learning (artificial intelligence); organisational aspects; project management; strategic planning; business management; competitive consequences; competitive dynamics; complex adaptive systems; complex environments; complexity management; generative learning; instability; internal organizational culture; market share; planning; project managers; self organizing agents; social environment; technical environment; technology intensive project management; technology intensive projects; Adaptation models; Complexity theory; Context; Organizations; Technology management;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Technology Management for Emerging Technologies (PICMET), 2012 Proceedings of PICMET '12:
  • Conference_Location
    Vancouver, BC
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-2853-1
  • Type

    conf

  • Filename
    6304259