Claremont Controls

HORNET SOFTWARE Business Resource Management
Business Resource Management
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What is Business Resource Management?

The environment in which modern businesses operate demands that managers continually and increasingly refine their business's operational efficiency to maintain a competitive edge.

Even within small manufacturing and service businesses however, the complexity of inter-related activities (e.g. development, production, promotion, moves, shut-down) and their corresponding human, physical and financial resources, can be hard to visualise - let alone manage effectively.

At the core, is the need to:

  • attribute resources (people, plant, cash) to activities or events
  • define and visualise the logical relationships between these activities
  • monitor the progress of the activities and the costs of their associated resources over time
  • provide a sound basis for management intervention
While these needs describe 'traditional' Project Management (e.g. within the construction industry), when applied to the far broader activities of a modern business, they are better described as Business Resource Management.

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How is it applied?

Business Resource Management requires that the 'traditional' Project Manager learns to understand how to apply his skills in support of the broader activities of other specialist managers and provide his colleagues with the task visualisation and monitoring tools they need for more effective management.

Often the key task will be to provide an overall summary view of the business's resources and associated activities to the directors - which can be 'drilled down' to provide line managers with information customised to suit their individual needs.

This scenario provides a basis for an organisation within a business that provides Project Management services in respect of projects or portfolios of projects that support the business objectives of a changing organisation.

In addition, the organisation needs to establish programme management roles to look after the portfolios and to determine priorities and resolve resource conflicts.

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Educational objectives

At the highest level, the board and senior managers need to have not only an appreciation of the project approach but how project management is used at the other levels. The objectives at other levels (programme, project and task) will be to increase competence at both individual and company level in definition, planning and execution.

The future line manager must take a prime role in reshaping and transforming organisations. The tools and methods available to him must allow him to visualise, monitor and control.

He needs to incorporate aspects of both portfolio management and project management so that training at board level or programme management level should provide an insight as to the complete business life cycle in project terms.

The overall educational philosophy must be to guide senior management organisation towards a 'Project' approach and use tried and trusted 'conventional' project management education and training for the detail of methods and techniques.

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