Top 5 Priorities for Your PMO in 2013
Learn about what should be the top 5 priorities for your PMO in 2013, as well as a list of undeniable trends and predictions for the coming year.
Leading the conversation on digital connected work
Learn about what should be the top 5 priorities for your PMO in 2013, as well as a list of undeniable trends and predictions for the coming year.
The role of the CIO has expanded from simply protecting data to turning it into business insights. Learn how work and resource management can help.
Get tips for Enterprise Architects on framing technology discussions in a business strategy context to earn your seat at the executive table.
When you introduce collaborative innovation to your organization, you suggest change will be better than the status quo. Why would colleagues agree?
I’ve long taken inspiration from Peter Drucker’s caution that “if you can’t measure it, you can’t manage it.” Technological progress has been punctuated by advances in measurement, ranging from Galileo’s telescope to Intel’s obsession with nanometers. Our industry is starting to go through a profound transformation in measuring how software is built, but only after...
Most software lifecycle integration (SLI) projects fail because organizations underestimate just how difficult integration is and are unaware that software development and delivery tools are not designed to integrate. The APIs in endpoint tools were built by their vendors to create a tiered architecture and not necessarily for third party integration. The tools are built...
Improve resource planning by following the five simple steps outlined in this mission to Mars use case. Watch the demo to learn how Innotas can help.
If you are finding yourself as one of these non-project managers running projects, here are the cliff-notes to getting started from a certified PMP.
It's impossible to talk about projects without talking about risk management, as projects carry a degree of variability and uncertainty.
When it comes to improving project estimates, you must know your directions—you must know which direction you should use to develop an appropriate estimate.