Kaysi, Serhat (2013): “Sustainability; A New Element of Project Success” “From whose point of view is Velodrome Park and Wind Turbine projects considered a success or failure?”.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_62357.pdf Download (403kB) | Preview |
Abstract
There are plenty of reasons why a project to fail. While all projects strive to succeed, many of them are either over budget or unable to deliver their objectives and that is the reason almost 90 % of all projects either become restarts or fail. On the other hand, project success is possible and there are some other essential criteria to accomplish that.
London Olympic Committee and ODA believed the Olympic projects were successful, delivered on time and within the budget. Was that really the case? Although there were many facts to consider that the event was a “triumph”, many believe projects were not delivered within budget and there was an undelivered failed project. Moreover, from whose point of view the entire event would be a complete triumph, success or failure still arguable? This research believes that there were many perspectives and different opinions about the games and therefore, business, user and suppliers point of views were explained to understand why there would be always different opinions and perspectives on the events.
In order to create successful and valuable projects “sustainability” becomes paramount for project management. The researcher proposes that project management has a lot to learn from sustainability. Especially, Velodrome Park and Wind Turbine projects represent great examples of success and failure, respectively.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | “Sustainability; A New Element of Project Success” “From whose point of view is Velodrome Park and Wind Turbine projects considered a success or failure?” |
English Title: | “Sustainability; A New Element of Project Success” “From whose point of view is Velodrome Park and Wind Turbine projects considered a success or failure?” |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Sustainability, Project success and Failure, London Olympics, Velodrome and Wind Turbine |
Subjects: | M - Business Administration and Business Economics ; Marketing ; Accounting ; Personnel Economics > M0 - General > M00 - General R - Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics > R0 - General Z - Other Special Topics > Z0 - General > Z00 - General |
Item ID: | 62357 |
Depositing User: | Serhat Kaysi |
Date Deposited: | 10 Mar 2015 06:21 |
Last Modified: | 26 Sep 2019 10:29 |
References: | References: A.Davies, I.Mackenzie, (2013) ‘Project complexity and systems integration: Constructing the London 2012 Olympics and Paralympics Games’. International Journal of Project Management, 32(5), pp. 773-790. APM (2006) Association for Project Management, Body of Knowledge, 5th Ed., Turpin. Atkinson, R., (1999) ‘Project management: Cost, time and quality, two best guesses and a phenomenon, its time to accept other success criteria’, International Journal of Project Management, 17 (6), pp. 337-342. Avots, I., (1969) Why does project management fail? California Management Review, 12 (1), pp. 77-82. Belassi, W. and Tukel O. L., (1996) ‘A new framework for determining critical succes/failure factors in projects’, International Journal of Project Management, 14 (3), pp. 141-151. Berkun, (2008) Making things happen: Mastering project management, 1st ed, O’Reilly, USA. Bon-Gang Hwang, Wei Jian Ng (2013) ‘Project management knowledge and skills for green construction: overcoming challenges’, International Journal of Project Management, 31, (2), pp. 272-284. CIOB, (2012) ‘Sir John Armitt talks to CIOB members about London 2012 Olympic Games’, CIOBTV. Available at: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCsJ3tnW32M (Accessed: 07 April 13) CSL, Commission for Sustainable London, (2010) ‘Commission’s statement on the Olympic Park Wind Turbine’. Available at: http://www.cslondon.org/2010/06/commissions-statement-on-the-olympic-park-wind-turbine/ (Accessed: 18 March 2013) CSL, (2011) ‘Commission’s official statement on press release issued by the ODA’. Available at: http://www.cslondon.org/2011/04/commissions-official-statement-on-press-release-issued-by-the-oda-on-8-april-2011 (Accessed: 18 March 2013) CSL, (n.d) ‘Case study: Renewable energy’. Available at: http://www.cslondon.org/sustainable-games/case-study-renewable-energy/ (Accessed: 18 March 2013) Douglas, (2010) ‘Olympics watch, the Velodrome’. Engineering and Technology, 5(2). Fotwe, F.T., and Price Andrew (2009) ‘Social ontology for appraising sustainability of construction projects and developments’, International journal of project management, 27 (4) pp. 313-322. Frese, R., (2003) ‘Project success and failure: what is success, what is failure and how can you improve your odds for success?’ [Online] Available at: http://www.umsl.edu/~sauterv/analysis/6840_f03_papers/frese/ (Accessed 17 April 2013) G. Cserháti, L. Szabó, (2013) ‘The relationship between success criteria and success factors in organisational event projects,’ International Journal of Project Management, 32(4) Pp. 613-624. Gray, (2012) ‘London 2012 Olympics: How green are the most sustainable Olympics ever?’ Available at: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/earthnews/9447915/London-2012-Olympics-How-green-are-the-most-sustainable-Olympics-ever.html (Accessed: 18 March 2013) Girginov, (2010) The Olympics a critical leader, 1st ed., Routledge, United Kingdom. Harding, J, (2012) ‘Avoiding project failures’, Chemical Engineering, 119 (13), pp. 51-54. Hill, A., (2010) ‘London 2012 organisers scrap plans for Olympic Park Wind Turbine,’ Available at: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2010/jun/03/london-2012-olympic-park-turbine (Accessed: 14 March 2012) Interior Services Group, ISG, (2011) ‘Annual sustainability report,’ ISGPLC, Available at: http://www.isgplc.com/Annual_Sustainability_Report_2011_-_FINAL.pdf (Accessed: 06 March 2013) Jackson, T., (2012) ‘London Olympics: The Greenest Games Ever?’ Available at: http://blog.gogreensolar.com/2012/08/london-olympics-greenest-games-ever.html (Accessed: 18 March 2013) Labuchagne, C., and Brent Alan, C (2005) ‘Sustainable Project Life Cycle Management: the need to integrate life cycles in the manufacturing sector,’ international journal of project management. 23(2) pp.159-168. Meredith and Mantel, (2012) Project Management: a managerial approach, 8th ed., Wiley, Asia. Myddelton, D.R. (2007) They Meant Well: government project disasters, London: the institute of economic affairs (IEA) Poon, S. and Young, R. (2013) ‘Top Management Support- almost always necessary and sometimes sufficient for success: findings from a fuzzy set analysis.’ International journal of project management, 31 (7), pp. 943-957 Proctor, W (2009) ‘Sustainability Assessment: accounting for the triple bottom line.’ Ecos no. 147: 29. UK & Ireland Reference Centre, [EBSCOhost] (accessed April 29, 2014). R.J.Yang, (2013) ‘An investigation of stakeholder analysis in urban development projects: Empirical or rationalistic perspectives.’ International Journal of Project Management, 32(5), pp. 838-849. Sauser, J.b., Reily, R. and Shenhar, J.A., (2009) ‘Why projects fail? How contingency theory can provide new insights – A comparative analysis of NASA’s Mars Climate Orbiter Loss,’ International Journal of Project Management, 27 (7), pp.665-679. Schipper, (2013) ‘Sustainability Special,’ The Voice of Project Management, 2 (257), p.25. Schwalbe, (2011) Information Technology Project management, 6th ed, Course Technology, USA. Silvius, Schipper, Planko, Brink and Köhler, A., (2012) Sustainability in Project Management, GOWER. England. Steer, A. (2013) The new language of sustainability: risk and resilience. Ecos, (181), 1-3. ODA, (2011b) ‘Learning legacy: Lessons learned from London 2012 Games construction projects, sustainable strategy development.’ Available at: http://learninglegacy.independent.gov.uk/documents/pdfs/sustainability/17-environment-incident-categories-sust.pdf (Accessed: 18 March 2013) OGC, Office of Government Commerce, (2005) Managing successful projects with PRINCE2, 5th ed., TSO, Norwich. OGC, Office of Government Commerce (2009) Managing successful projects with PRINCE2, 5th ed., TSO, Norwich. Turner, (1993) The handbook of project-based management, McGraw-Hill, London. Toor, R. S and Ogunlana, O. S., (2010) ‘Beyond the iron triangle: Stakeholder perception of key performance indicators for large-scale public sector development projects,’ International Journal of Project Management, 28 (3), pp. 228-236. Xiaoling Zhang, Yuzhe Wu, Liyin Shen, Martin Skitmore (2014) ‘A prototype system dynamic model for assessing the sustainability of construction projects,’ International Journal of Project Management, 32 (1), pp. 66-76 Zwikael, O, and Globerson, S., (2006) ‘From critical success factors to critical success processes,’ International Journal of Production Research, 44 (17), pp. 3433-3449. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/62357 |