Project Management

How Priorities Make Things Happen [Book Excerpt]

Editor: Project manager and writer Scott Berkun knows how to get things done when you've got a team of people, a to-do list, and a deadline. Today he offers an excerpt from his newest book, a...
Source: Lifehacker

Total Organizer Manages Your Projects [Featured Windows Download]

Windows only: Total Organizer is a lightweight personal information manager with a surprising number of features for its diminutive size and memory footprint. Total Organizer has the basics covered:...
Source: Lifehacker

A Web presence for your business?

Intelligent Enterprise: A new Ventana Research report finds that most companies are falling short on the basics of performance management. Here are five sets of diagnostic questions as well as best practices for broader, more responsive and more effective planning and budgeting. Complete Story

Klok Tracks Time and Projects Simply [Featured Download]

Windows/Mac/Linux (Adobe Air): Klok, a free time and project-tracking app for the Adobe Air platform, is a great time-tracking solution for multi-platform users, as well as anyone who likes to keep...
Source: Lifehacker

Mobile-Friendly Project Tracking with Tempo [Project Management]

Tempo isn't the first or only web-based project tracker, but it conforms pretty well to whatever methods you prefer for entering and receiving data—email, Twitter and SMS messages, mobile or...
Source: Lifehacker

Excel Gantt Chart Redux [Exclusive Lifehacker Download]

Reader Tom saw our previously posted Excel Gantt chart template and said he had a better one to offer. Why a spreadsheet? Tom says: I do most of my project planning in MS Project which is great,...
Source: Lifehacker

Tame Your Inbox [How To]

Blogger Chris Brogan has finally gotten his email inbox down to zero messages, and shares his tips on how to get there. Using a combination of an archive folder, calendaring software, project...
Source: Lifehacker

Frank Hayes: Hard questions needed to save projects

"What now? That's the hard question. When an IT project is in trouble, it's easy to ask what went wrong and who's to blame. Easy and popular. And fun, if you're not on the hot seat. But what to do to save the project? That's harder -- a lot harder. Especially when, as with the U.S. Census Bureau's "paperless census" project, it can't be killed and can't be delayed." Complete Story Advertisement:

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