2022/2023 KAN-CCMVI2094U Lean Project Managment and Strategic Employment Relations
English Title | |
Lean Project Managment and Strategic Employment Relations |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | Summer |
Start time of the course | Summer |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Max. participants | 60 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business
Administration
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Course coordinator | |
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For academic questions related to the course, please contact course coordinator and instructor Charles Tackney (cta.msc@cbs.dk). | |
Main academic disciplines | |
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Teaching methods | |
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Last updated on 16-11-2022 |
Relevant links |
Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||
To achieve the grade 12, students should meet the
following learning objectives with no or only minor mistakes or
errors:
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Course prerequisites | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Completed Social Science Bachelor degree. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content, structure and pedagogical approach | ||||||||||||||||||||||
This case-based discussion course, with supporting lectures,
examines the increasingly dynamic field of project management
basics and beyond in the context of the knowledge necessary to
design, manage, and evaluate project work in today's
globalized, complex organizations. Three course propositions help
organize course goals and curriculum design:
1. National and regional historical differences in employment
relations, examined in case studies, aid understanding of, and
theorizing about, project management success or failure.
2. Authenticity in employment relations, at individual and
institutional levels, is a necessary, possibly sufficient,
predictor condition for success in project management
leadership.
3. The history and deployment of lean management project
principles has caused a functional breakdown in traditional
distinctions between corporate strategy and project management.
Understanding this development is essential for success in project
management performance and evaluation.
Lecture and case analysis will provide key elements regarding
leadership and management of projects. An epistemology of project
leadership steadily develops throughout the course, made apparent
in Gantt charting of the course sequence. Finally, case analyses
ground the historical context for understanding how and why lean
management has come to challenge traditional notions of corporate
strategy.
The course, including the mini-project proposal, review, and
Home Assignment, will help graduate students in project management
leadership while refining their understanding of research methods,
which will aid Master's thesis preparations.
Preliminary assignment: Complete a pre-course survey, read a
few short pieces on epistemology and method, come to class ready to
present and discuss personal insight experiences.
Class 1: A. The Vasa case. B. Personal insight and Project
leadership: the basics. Home assignment and proposal exercise
described.
Class 2: Comparative ecologies of employment: regional and
national variation.
Class 3: Project Management (PM) 1: Managing Projects Large
and Small.
Class 4: PM 2: Managing Projects Large and Small
Class 5: Project Management 3: To whom does this company
belong? A case from Japan.
Class 6: From Projects to Temporary Organizations. The Medisys
Case and Packendorff's "Temporary
Organization."
feedback activity: Term paper proposal evaluations
returned.
Class 7: PM in Corporate Strategy: Escalation in global
outsourcing projects: the XperTrans - C&C BPO case.
Class 8: Lean Management as Corporate Strategy - Toyota,
Kentucky and Global root cause critical analysis of Toyota.
Class 9: PM and Corporate Strategy: Volkswagen in the US
Class 10: PM and Global Team Dynamics: Structure, Process,
Language, Identity, and Technology (SPLIT analysis).
Class 11: Review and Course Summation: Lean Strategic
Management.
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Description of the teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||
The course combines a basic project management text with a course-specific Harvard Business Publishing coursepack. Additional readings are also listed by session. Lectures combine with case discussion, which depend upon student preparation, to develop a body of literature appropriate to address the key course theses. Students develop a term paper topic, with instructor support in a preliminary proposal, which can then be developed in time tor examination filing. The course content sequence is clearly conveyed in an overall Gantt chart with session-specific "take aways" posted to our Canvas course folder. | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback during the teaching period | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback will include tentative approval /
comments on home assignment proposals. As a case-based course,
feedback is a dynamic feature of each case discussed, where we link
the case to the three propositions that structure the course.
Home Project Assignments/mini projects are based on a research question (problem formulation) formulated by the students individually. Approval deadline will be defined by the instructor. Hand-in of the problem formulation directly to the instructor by the 3rd teaching week. |
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Student workload | ||||||||||||||||||||||
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Further Information | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Ordinary 6 weeks course
Preliminary
Assignment, Graduate level:
The course coordinator uploads Preliminary Assignment on Canvas
at the end of May. It is expected that students participate as it
will be included in the final exam, but the assignment is without
independent assessment&grading.
Course and exam timetable is/will be available on https://www.cbs.dk/uddannelse/international-summer-university-programme-isup/courses-and-exams
We reserve the right to cancel the course if we do not get enough applications. This will be communicated on https://www.cbs.dk/uddannelse/international-summer-university-programme-isup/courses-and-exams in early March. |
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Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||
Mandatory readings:
Managing Projects Large and Small (any recent edition). Cambridge: Harvard Business Publishing.
A Harvard Business Publishing Coursepack, with this preliminary
assignment reading for first class: Alan MacCormack, Richard Mason,
“The Fate of the Vasa.” Harvard Business School Case Study # 605026
(2005). The coursepack will be available for ordering through the
publisher in a link offered in our CBS intranet, CANVAS.
Additional relevant readings (there will be others):
Vendantan, Shankar; Stein, Rob (April 25, 2003). Death rate
for Global Outbreak Rising. Washington Post, pg. A01.
Tackney, CT (2008). Where would you like to work, and why? A
Legal Ecology Instructional Model for the Comparative Study of the
Modern Enterprise. Paper presented to the Management Education
Division, the Academy of Management Annual Meeting 2008,
Anaheim.
Brière, S., Proulx, D., Flores, ON, and Laporte, M. (2015).
Competencies of project managers in international NGOs: Perceptions
of practitioners. International Journal of Project Management. 33:
116 - 125.
Anantatmula, V., Thomas, M. (April 2010). Managing global
projects: A structured approach for better performance. Project
Management Journal. 60- 72.
Case: Tackney, Charles T. (2006). "To Whom Does This
Company Belong?" An Instructional Case Unit Concerning
Japanese Management and Comparative Corporate Governance in the
1988 Labor Union.
Case: Tackney, Charles T. (2006). "To Whom Does This
Company Belong?" An Instructional Case Unit Concerning
Japanese Management and Comparative Corporate Governance in the
1988 Labor Union Coup at Okuma Corporation, a Japanese Machine Tool
Manufacturer.
Tackney, Charles T. (2001). The Modes of Social Relation in
Japanese Management Practice. Chapter 16 in Cary L. Cooper, Sue
Cartwright, and P. Christopher Earley (Eds.). The International
Handbook of Organizational Culture and Climate (pp. 377- 390).
London: John Wiley & Sons.
Packendorff, J. (1995). Inquiring into the temporary
organization: New directions for project management research.
Scandinavian Journal of Management. 11: 4, 319-333.
Case: Brooks, C. (2016), Organizing Volkswagen: A Critical
Assessment. WorkingUSA, 19: 395–417. doi: 10.1111 /
wusa.12249.
Juravich, T. (2016). A Year to Remember: Reviewing Labor
Movement Highlights and Lowlights. New Labor Forum. 25: 2,
80-87.
Lewicki, R .; Elgoibar, P., and M. Euwema (2016). The Tree of
Trust: building and repairing trust in organizations. Chapter 6 in
Building Trust and Constructive Conflict Management in
Organizations (Lewicki, R .; Elgoibar, P., and M. Euwema, Eds.).
Pp. 93 - 117. London: Springer.
Distelhorst, G .; Hainmueller, J. and RM Locke (2016). Does
Lean Improve Labor Standards? Management and Social Performance in
the Nike Supply Chain. Management Science.
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