A San Francisco foundation today announced that it is providing $2.5-million to help “pay for success” projects gain a philanthropic foothold in California as similar efforts advance in Massachusetts, ...
Who hasn’t worked on a project that went nowhere or got canceled? Sometimes the project deserves it because it was ill-conceived or poorly executed. Sometimes markets moved or there wasn’t really a ...
When the once-promising horizon of a software project turns stormy with delays, errors and missed targets, it's important to take a considered approach instead of abruptly discontinuing it. There's ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. The stakes are high in construction; getting it right is ...
According to the widely quoted “Chaos Chronicles,” a staggering 66% of IT projects prove unsuccessful in some measure, whether they fail completely, exceed their allotted budget, aren’t completed ...
Let me share a story that fundamentally changed my perspective on project success. In my previous role at a major corporation, I was the typical certified project manager. Armed with my PMP ...
The construction industry has a reputation for being a slow adopter of new technology. In fact – and not to put too fine a point on this, but – one anonymous company highlighted in the JB Knowledge ...
SALT LAKE CITY--(BUSINESS WIRE)--FranklinCovey (NYSE: FC), one of the largest and most trusted leadership companies in the world, today announced a major update of its Project Management for the ...
The best project managers are those who consistently deliver, on time and within budget, projects that meet or exceed stakeholders’ expectations. Those project managers understand that leadership and ...
A recent MIT Media Lab/Project NANDA study stated that 95% of generative AI pilots fail. Working with many clients on their first AI project, we have observed a pattern that offers clues to both AI ...
Canada is experiencing a surge in nuclear job creation - and the demand for a skilled workforce will continue to grow, a new study commissioned by the Canadian Nuclear Association (CNA) has found.