Projects and project managers

the relationship between project managers' personality, project types, and project success

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ArticleLeadershipDecember 2006

Project Management Journal

Dvir, Dov | Sadeh, Arye | Malach-Pines, Ayala

How to cite this article:

Dvir, D., Sadeh, A., & Malach-Pines, A. (2006). Projects and project managers: the relationship between project managers' personality, project types, and project success. Project Management Journal, 37(5), 36–48.
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Numerous studies have looked at the relationship between project performance and project success; and many researchers have suggested that a general project management approach may hinder a project team's effort to deliver the optimal results expected. One perspective for explaining this suggestion asserts that because different types of projects involve different types of activities and concerns, most project managers are incapable of managing all types of projects. This article examines an interdisciplinary study of the impact that a project manager's personality has on their project's performance and success. In doing so, it discusses project management and personality psychology in relation to three of the field's research areas: project classification, manager personality, and measures of project success. With this, it explains a four-dimensional model--NCTP (novelty, complexity, technology, pace)--for classifying projects and for matching projects and project managers.

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