• DocumentCode
    1500129
  • Title

    An Adaptive Process Model to Support Product Development Project Management

  • Author

    Levardy, V. ; Browning, Tyson R.

  • Author_Institution
    3D Syst. Eng. GmbH, Munich, Germany
  • Volume
    56
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2009
  • Firstpage
    600
  • Lastpage
    620
  • Abstract
    Projects are temporary allocations of resources commissioned to achieve a desired result. Since each project is unique, the landscape between the current state (the start of the project) and the desired state (the successful end of the project) is often dynamic, uncertain, and ambiguous. Conventional project plans define a set of related activities (a work breakdown structure and activity network) with the assumptions that this set is necessary and sufficient to reach the project´s desired result. Popular models for project planning (scheduling, budgeting, etc.) and control are also based on a set of project activities that are specified and scheduled a priori. However, these assumptions often do not hold, because, as an attempt to do something novel, the actual path to a project´s desired result is often revealed only by the additional light provided once the work is underway. In this paper, we model a product development process as a complex adaptive system. Rather than prespecifying which activities will be done and when, we set up: 1) a superset of general classes of activities, each with modes that vary in terms of inputs, duration, cost, and expected benefits; and 2) simple rules for activity mode combination. Thus, instead of rigidly dictating a specific project schedule a priori, we provide a ldquoprimordial souprdquo of activities and simple rules through which the activities can self-organize. Instead of attempting to prescribe an optimal process, we simulate thousands of adaptive cases and let the highest-value process emerge. Analyzing these cases leads to insights regarding the most likely paths (processes) across the project landscape, the patterns of iteration along the paths, and the paths´ costs, durations, risks, and values. The model also provides a decision support capability for managers. For researchers, this way of viewing projects and the modeling framework provide a new basis for future studies of agile and adaptive processe- s.
  • Keywords
    process planning; product development; project management; resource allocation; activity mode combination; adaptive process model; complex adaptive system; decision support capability; product development project management; project control; project planning; Adaptive systems; Costs; Electric breakdown; Modeling; Pattern analysis; Product development; Project management; Resource management; Risk analysis; Systems engineering and theory; Adaptive processes; agile project management; process modeling; product development; project management;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9391
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TEM.2009.2033144
  • Filename
    5286864