• DocumentCode
    1479375
  • Title

    Managing by E-Mail: What E-mail Can Do for Engineering Project Management

  • Author

    Wasiak, James ; Hicks, Ben ; Newnes, Linda ; Loftus, Craig ; Dong, Andy ; Burrow, Laurie

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Mech. Eng., Univ. of Bath, Bath, UK
  • Volume
    58
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2011
  • Firstpage
    445
  • Lastpage
    456
  • Abstract
    E-mails are, rightly or wrongly, a staple of the information and communication technology for managing work and collaborative activities. This paper examines the value of the content of e-mail at a project level rather than at the often-studied level of the individual user. The dataset consists of e-mails authored by an engineering team associated with a large, complex, long term, systems integration project, typical of the aerospace, marine, and defense sectors. The research applied a qualitative content analysis methodology to classify the content (what the e-mail contains) and purpose (why the e-mail was sent) of the e-mail in the dataset. The results of the content analysis were compared and contrasted with secondary evidence from interviews and project documentation to enable a time-phased analysis. The findings show that classifying e-mail content by the categories of management, information, and problem-solving transactions revealed signatures that align with project phases and, more importantly, problems encountered. Finally, we found that the purpose of e-mail is not necessarily consistent with the designated job role or responsibility of the sender or recipient. This paper contributes to empirical data on the relation between communication and project performance and the changing nature of e-mail communication throughout the lifecycle of a project. The findings point to a new way to leverage e-mail content to “manage by e-mail”.
  • Keywords
    electronic mail; groupware; project engineering; project management; team working; transaction processing; aerospace sector; collaborative activity; defense sectors; e-mail communication; e-mail content classification; engineering project management; engineering team; information and communication technology; managing work; marine sector; problem-solving transactions; project documentation; project lifecycle; project performance; qualitative content analysis methodology; systems integration project; time-phased analysis; Companies; Documentation; Electronic mail; Encoding; Project management; Reliability; Electronic mail (e-mail); professional communication; project management; research and development management;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9391
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TEM.2010.2090160
  • Filename
    5738325