工程管理专业外文文献以及汉文翻译(共31页).doc
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1、精选优质文档-倾情为你奉上 外文文献:The project management office as an organisational innovation Brian Hobbs *, Monique Aubry, Denis ThuillierUniversity of Quebec at Montreal, Department of Management and Technology, PO Box 8888, Downtown Station, Montreal, Que, Canada H3C 3P8Received 15 May 2008; accepted 20 May 2
2、008Abstract The paper presents an investigation of the creation and the reconfiguration of project management offices (PMOs) as an organizational innovation. The analysis of 11 organisational transformations centred on the implementation or reconfiguration of PMOs is presented. The objective of the
3、paper is to contribute to a better understanding of PMOs and of the dynamic relationship between project management and the organisational context. The aim is also to integrate the examination of PMOs as an organisational innovation into the mainstream of research on the place of project management
4、in organisations and more widely to the rethinking of project management.”1. Introduction Quite often over the last decade, the observation has been made that organisations are facing a new context characterized by increased competition, increased rates of product, service and process innovation and
5、 an increasing emphasis on time to market. Organisations have responded to these challenges by developing new, more flexible organisational forms 1 in which projects are both more numerous and more strategically important 2. As part of the response to these new challenges and as part of the movement
6、 to increase both the number and the strategic importanceof projects many organisations have implemented a new organisational entity the most common name for which is the project management office or PMO. The PMO has been addressed extensively in the professional literature 35. However, there has be
7、en very little theoretical or empirical research on the topic. In addition, this organisational innovation has not been examined extensively within the literature stream described above.2. Recent survey-based research on PMOs Arecent survey-based on the synchronic description of a large number of PM
8、Os and their organisational contexts has shown extreme variety in both the form and function of PMOs 6. Attempts to date to reduce this variety to a limited number of models have failed. In addition, the research showed that in the majority of cases PMOs are unstable structures, organisations often
9、reconfigure their PMOs every few years. This instability can be interpreted as both an illustration of structuring as an ongoing organisational process 1 and as an illustration of organisational experimentation as organisations search for an adequate structural arrangement 7. Half of the respondents
10、 to the survey report that the legitimacy of their PMO in its present form is being questioned. This is consistent with both the interpretation in terms of experimentation and a search for best practices and with the interpretation as an instance of the inherent instability of an ongoing process of
11、structuring. In the survey-based research cited above, correlation analysis found no systematic relationships between the external context in terms of economic sector or geographic region or internal organisational context, on the one hand, and the structural characteristics of PMOs on the other. No
12、ne of the classic contingency factors from organisational theory correlated strongly with the form or function of the PMOs. A positivist, synchronic approach has provided a rich description of the great variety found in the population but has failed, so far, to provide an adequate understanding of P
13、MOs. The present paper reports the result of an effort to come to a better understanding of PMOs as an organisational innovation based on the in-depth investigation of eleven cases.3. The literature on organisational innovation Four subsets of the literature on innovation are examined to identify al
14、ternative approaches relevant to the examination of PMOs as organizational innovations. First, the general literature on innovation is examined. This is followed by an examination of the literature based on evolutionary, co-evolutionary and institutional isomorphism approaches. All are sensitive to
15、evolution over time.3.1. The general literature on innovation Early research on innovation had operated mostly from an economic perspective and a general assumption of growth 8. The interdisciplinary curriculum has developed over time with the contribution of new knowledge stemming from a variety of
16、 sources: economics 911, organisational management 12, sociology 13 and social ecology 14. Others provide a categorization of innovation based on product, process or architecture 15,16.In this perspective, organisations are considered to be very similar, responding to the same incentives. The object
17、ives of research are often to provide organisations with practical solutions determining factors to innovative success. Innovation theory is now shifting to a social innovation approach, broadening the concept of technological innovation to a social system. .the sociological crucial point is that or
18、ganisations have not only become prominent actors in society, they may have become the only kind of actor with significant cultural and political influence. Yet, recent organisation theory has surprisingly little to say about how organisations affect the society.” 13, p. 148 New questions have emerg
19、ed which lead to motivation theory and to the context of innovation that rehabilitates history along with innovation, thus introducing the temporal element to the social innovation system 17,18. This historical perspective was a natural step after the ecological model which demonstrated the usefulne
20、ss of the biological metaphor with the concepts of evolution and co-evolution 19. This social approach paved the way for looking at organisations as part of the social innovation system and new forms of structure as innovations. Along this line of thought, innovation is viewed as an art or, more exa
21、ctly, as a craft 18. Innovation then becomes a creative act, the dynamic construction of something new in which it can be difficult to discern any regular pattern 1 20.3.2. From evolutionary theory to co-evolution The evolutionary theory was developed in the theory of organizations based on a biolog
22、ical metaphor. A basic evolutionary model of an organisation envisions it as a collection of routines or stable bundles of activities. With time, variation occurs within these routines with the result that any given set of routines evolves, whether intentionally or not. A certain number of new routi
23、nes are then adopted as temporarily permanent practices. This simple variationselectionretention repeats continuously 21, p. 76. Evolutionary theories are made up of two major groups: contingency theories and social theories. Contingency theories consider technological change as an exogenous phenome
24、non which triggers organisational evolution 8,22. This deterministic approach makes structural arrangements predictable from variables such as complexity, uncertainty and interdependency, which can be integrated into a single dimension the ability to treat information 23. Social theories view organi
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