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Anatomy of a 21st-century project: A quick autopsy

Dymitrow, Mirek LU and Ingelhag, Karin (2020) p.1-12
Abstract
We all are accustomed to projects. Projects are everywhere, and everything is basically a project. We have learnt how to deal with projects, for better or worse. Some of us love them, some of us are fed up with them. But projects are here to stay. Projects are far from a new invention, what has changed is the fine-tuning. It has changed to the point that projects of today are virtually unrecognisable from those from days of yore. All projects of today ‘must’ be green. They must have social relevance. They must be innovative, and must leave footprints (not ecological, hopefully). Projects of today are ideally transdisciplinary; wearing blinkers is a thing of the past. Inclusive projects, bottom-up projects, future-minded projects… who would... (More)
We all are accustomed to projects. Projects are everywhere, and everything is basically a project. We have learnt how to deal with projects, for better or worse. Some of us love them, some of us are fed up with them. But projects are here to stay. Projects are far from a new invention, what has changed is the fine-tuning. It has changed to the point that projects of today are virtually unrecognisable from those from days of yore. All projects of today ‘must’ be green. They must have social relevance. They must be innovative, and must leave footprints (not ecological, hopefully). Projects of today are ideally transdisciplinary; wearing blinkers is a thing of the past. Inclusive projects, bottom-up projects, future-minded projects… who would even challenge that? Projects are no longer targeted, planned, structured endeavours; that description no longer suffices. To be able to do projects today, we are trained in project management, project leadership, spreadsheets, GANT charts, swimlanes, Kanban, Scrum, Waterfall, sprints, deliverables, bandwidths, roadblocks, backlogs, agile methodologies and the like. Have you noticed a pattern yet? On the other hand, projects of today are full of pitfalls. Lack of resources, scope creep, poor project handling, unrealistic deadlines, lack of interest from stakeholders or simply not paying attention to warning signs are just some of the most oft-cited reasons why projects fail. With this book, we want to halt this chthonic gallop, and just pause for a while. We want to open the lid to the black box of project-making and let it stay aslant for the time it takes to read this book, so we can peek into what goes on – on the inside. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
projects, projectification, 21st-century, autoethnography, sustainability
host publication
Anatomy of a 21st-century sustainability project: The untold storie
editor
Dymitrow, Mirek and Ingelhag, Karin
pages
12 pages
publisher
Chalmers Tekniska Högskola
ISBN
978-91-984166-3-3
978-91-984166-3-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
895a1a54-179a-48e9-b470-a05d2b9d2d4e
alternative location
https://research.chalmers.se/publication/517468
date added to LUP
2020-06-23 19:25:28
date last changed
2020-06-24 09:14:26
@inbook{895a1a54-179a-48e9-b470-a05d2b9d2d4e,
  abstract     = {{We all are accustomed to projects. Projects are everywhere, and everything is basically a project. We have learnt how to deal with projects, for better or worse. Some of us love them, some of us are fed up with them. But projects are here to stay. Projects are far from a new invention, what has changed is the fine-tuning. It has changed to the point that projects of today are virtually unrecognisable from those from days of yore. All projects of today ‘must’ be green. They must have social relevance. They must be innovative, and must leave footprints (not ecological, hopefully). Projects of today are ideally transdisciplinary; wearing blinkers is a thing of the past. Inclusive projects, bottom-up projects, future-minded projects… who would even challenge that? Projects are no longer targeted, planned, structured endeavours; that description no longer suffices. To be able to do projects today, we are trained in project management, project leadership, spreadsheets, GANT charts, swimlanes, Kanban, Scrum, Waterfall, sprints, deliverables, bandwidths, roadblocks, backlogs, agile methodologies and the like. Have you noticed a pattern yet? On the other hand, projects of today are full of pitfalls. Lack of resources, scope creep, poor project handling, unrealistic deadlines, lack of interest from stakeholders or simply not paying attention to warning signs are just some of the most oft-cited reasons why projects fail. With this book, we want to halt this chthonic gallop, and just pause for a while. We want to open the lid to the black box of project-making and let it stay aslant for the time it takes to read this book, so we can peek into what goes on – on the inside.}},
  author       = {{Dymitrow, Mirek and Ingelhag, Karin}},
  booktitle    = {{Anatomy of a 21st-century sustainability project: The untold storie}},
  editor       = {{Dymitrow, Mirek and Ingelhag, Karin}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-984166-3-3}},
  keywords     = {{projects; projectification; 21st-century; autoethnography; sustainability}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{06}},
  pages        = {{1--12}},
  publisher    = {{Chalmers Tekniska Högskola}},
  title        = {{Anatomy of a 21st-century project: A quick autopsy}},
  url          = {{https://research.chalmers.se/publication/517468}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}