Question: From Acme Corporation Case Study, prepare a report on Potential breaches of the Project Management Institute (PMI) ethical standards by the Project team and find

From Acme Corporation Case Study, prepare a report on Potential breaches of the Project Management Institute (PMI) ethical standards by the Project team and find consequences to the stakeholders of accepting the project sponsor aggressive bid and risks involved in this project.

Case Study

BACKGROUND Acme Corporation embarked upon an optimistic project to develop a new product for the marketplace. Acmes scientific community made a technical break-through and now the project appears to be in the development stage, more than being pure or applied research. The product is considered to be high tech. If the product can be launched within the next four months, Acme expects to dominate the market for at least a year or so until the competition catches up. Marketing has stated that the product must sell for not more than $150 to $160 per unit to be the cost-focused market leader. Acme uses a project management methodology for all multifunctional projects. The methodology has six life cycle phases: 1. Preliminary planning 2. Detailed planning 3. Execution/design selection 4. Prototyping 5. Testing/buyoff6.Production At the end of each life cycle phase a gate/phase review meeting is held with the project sponsor and other appropriate stakeholders. Gate review meetings are formal meetings. The company has demonstrated success following this method-ology for managing projects. At the end of the second life cycle stage of this project, detailed planning, a meeting is held with just the project manager and the project sponsor. The purpose of the meeting is to review the detailed plan and identify any future problem areas that will require involvement by the project sponsor. THE MEETING Sponsor: I simply do not understand this document you sent me entitled Risk Management Plan. All I see is a work breakdown structure with work packages at level 5 of the WBS accompanied by almost 100 risk events. Why am I looking at more than 100 risk events? Furthermore, theyre not categorized in any manner. Doesnt our project management methodology provide any guidance on how to do this? PM: All of these risk events can and will impact the design of the final product. We must be sure we select the right design at the lowest risk. Unfortunately, our project management methodology does not include any provisions or guidance on how to develop a risk management plan. Perhaps it should. Sponsor: I see no reason for an in-depth analysis of 100 or so risk events. Thats too many. Where are the probabilities and expected outcomes or damages? PM: My team will not be assigning probabilities or damages until we get closer to prototype development. Some of these risk events may go away altogether.

Step by Step Solution

There are 3 Steps involved in it

1 Expert Approved Answer
Step: 1 Unlock blur-text-image
Question Has Been Solved by an Expert!

Get step-by-step solutions from verified subject matter experts

Step: 2 Unlock
Step: 3 Unlock

Students Have Also Explored These Related General Management Questions!