DocumentCode
2176786
Title
Project management capability levels: an empirical study
Author
McBride, Tom ; Henderson-Sellers, Brian ; Zowghi, Didar
Author_Institution
Univ. of Technol., Sydney, NSW, Australia
fYear
2004
fDate
30 Nov.-3 Dec. 2004
Firstpage
56
Lastpage
63
Abstract
This paper outlines existing maturity models of project management and their underlying constructs. Organizations involved in software development in Sydney, Australia were interviewed about their project management practices and their responses analysed to determine whether different project managers used different levels of project management practices and whether the practices were in accordance with a process based maturity model. This did not seem to be the case, yet the data suggested that, as a possible alternative, a systems theory based approach might be more tenable. The overall conclusion, that a system theory based maturity model appears to be better correlated with organizational size and software development maturity than a process based maturity model, is briefly discussed and additional research is suggested that could investigate this novel conclusion further.
Keywords
Capability Maturity Model; organisational aspects; project management; software development management; software metrics; statistical analysis; maturity models; organizational size; project management capability level; software development; system theory; Australia; Capability maturity model; Coordinate measuring machines; Monitoring; Programming; Project management; SPICE; Software development management; Software performance; US Government;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Software Engineering Conference, 2004. 11th Asia-Pacific
ISSN
1530-1362
Print_ISBN
0-7695-2245-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/APSEC.2004.77
Filename
1371905
Link To Document