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ISO 21500, Guidance on Project Management, is an international standard developed by the International Organization for Standardization, or ISO starting in 2007 and released in 2012. It was intended to provide generic guidance, explain core principles and what constitutes good practice in project management.[1] The ISO technical committee dealing with project management, ISO/PC 236 was held by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) which had approved four standards that used Project Management Institute (PMI) materials, one of which was ANSI/PMI 99-001-2008, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge - 4th Edition (PMI BoK® Guide - 4th Edition).[2]

ISO plans for this standard (21500) to be the first in a family of project management standards. ISO also designed this standard to align with other, related standards such as ISO 10005:2005 Quality management systems − Guidelines for quality plans, ISO 10006:2003 Quality management systems − Guidelines for quality management in projects, ISO 10007:2003 Quality management systems − Guidelines for configuration management, ISO 31000:2009 Risk management – Principles and guidelines.[3]

Background

The process approach to project management developed in the 1980s, largely in Europe.[4] The main focus of this approach is the use of structured processes throughout project execution in order to achieve its objectives.[4] Project management then is a structured process about converting a vision into reality and the major emphasis was on developing and defining processes in order to meet project objectives.[4] Research has demonstrated that organizational effectiveness is a direct function of the decision-making criteria and goal-centered activities embedded in processes[5] and implicitly, a process-based approach to project management.

Project life cycles come out of this process approach to project management. In fact, several core concepts in the Project Management Body of Knowledge are based upon the process based to project management, particularly, project management processes, integration management, and the management of quality and risk.[4]

Overview

ISO 21500 was developed to offer guidance on the concepts and processes of project management with the goal of implementing processes and best practices to improve project management performance.[6] While the standard describes important concepts and processes of project management it does not provide detailed guidance and general management topics are limited to relevant aspects of project management.[7] The standard as developed by the ISO was modeled on the Project Management Institute's Body of Knowledge (PMBoK), although there are some key differences.[8]

The ISO project management standard is only 47 pages long and is limited to the introduction of the processes, their inputs, and their outputs.[9] The PMI standard is more than 450 pages in length and describes processes, inputs, outputs and associated tools and techniques.[9] Both organizations use the concept of process as an integral part of project management. ISO and PMI segregate project processes into five process groups with some minor variances in labeling.[8] The differences between the two standards is minimal with respect to process groups and subjects/knowledge areas.[7] The substantive difference between the two standards is with the detail and description of tools and techniques, because ISO 21500:2012 does not provide it.[7][8] Another major change is the introduction of a new subject by ISO, namely, "stakeholder management".[9]

Criticism

One reviewer noted that the ISO 21500 project management processes were probably more useful in a cascade approach to scope definition as an alternative to using iterative approaches and therefore less attractive for project-oriented organizations.[9] Similarly, for the PMBoK, the major development in this coordinated approach was the requirement that a knowledge area always starts with the associated management plan.[9]

ISO 21500 certification

Since ISO 21500:2012 is a guidance document, it is not intended to be used for certification/registration purposes.

History

Year Description
2012 ISO 21500 (1st Edition)
2020 ISO 21502 (Reissued as a 1st Edition when ISO 21500:2021 became "Project, programme and portfolio management — Context and concepts")

See also

References

  1. ^ "ISO launches work on international standard for project management". ISO. 2007.
  2. ^ "ANSI Standards Action, page 17" (PDF). American National Standards Institute (ANSI). 2008. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
  3. ^ "New ISO standard on project management". ISO. 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d Christophe, N. Bredillet. "Exploring Research in Project Management: Nine Schools of Project Management Research (Part 5)." Project Management Journal ISSN 8756-9728 38.2 (2007): 3-4.
  5. ^ Nwagbogwu, Derrick Chukwuemeke. The correlation between project management effectiveness and project success. 2011. citing work by (Bastons, 2008; Campbell, 1977; Yukl, 2008)
    • Bastons, M. (2008). The role of virtues in the framing of decisions. Journal of Business Ethics, 78(93), 389-400. doi:10.1007/s10551-006-9332-x
    • Campbell, J. (1977). On the nature of organizational effectiveness. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
    • Yukl, G. (2008). How leaders influence organizational effectiveness. Leadership Quarterly, 19(6), 708-722. doi:10.1016/j.leaqua.2008.09.008
  6. ^ Varajão (2016) citing D. Milosevic, P. Patanakul, Standardized project management may increase development projects success, International Journal of Project Management, 23 (3) (2005), pp. 181–192
  7. ^ a b c Varajão, João, Ricardo Colomo-Palacios, and Hélio Silva. "ISO 21500: 2012 and PMBoK 5 processes in Information Systems Project Management." Computer Standards & Interfaces (2016).
  8. ^ a b c Drob, Catalin, and Valentin Zichil. "OVERVIEW REGARDING THE MAIN GUIDELINES, STANDARDS AND METHODOLOGIES USED IN PROJECT MANAGEMENT." Journal of Engineering Studies and Research 19.3 (2013): 26-31. ProQuest. Web. 11 Oct. 2016.
  9. ^ a b c d e REHACEK, Petr. "Standards ISO 21500 and PMBoK® Guide for Project Management. International Journal of Engineering Science and Innovative Technology (IJESIT) ISSN 2319-5967" Accessed on 10/11/2016 at [1]

Sources

  • Turner, J. R. (1999). The handbook of project based management (2nd ed.). London: McGraw-Hill.
  • Turner, J. R. (2006). Editorial: Towards a theory of project management: The nature of project governance and project management. International Journal of Project Management, 24, 93–95.
  • Turner, J. R. (2006). Editorial: Towards a theory of project management: The functions of project management. International Journal of Project Management, 24, 187–189.
  • Turner, J. R. (2006). Editorial: Towards a theory of project management: The nature of the functions of project management. International Journal of Project Management, 24, 277–279.
  • Winch, G. M., The construction firm and the construction project: A transaction cost approach, Construction Management and Economics, (1989) 7, 331–345.
  • Winch, G. M. Managing construction projects: An information processing approach, Oxford, UK: Blackwell Science. (2002)
  • Winch, G. M. Rethinking project management: Project organizations as information processing systems? Proceedings of PMI Research Conference, 2002: Frontiers of Project Management Research and Application [CD]. Newtown Square, PA: Project Management Institute.

ISO 21500:2021 Project, programme and portfolio management — Context and concepts