PPM Communications Blogs
Journeyman PM is a blog under the direction of Bert Heymans, a project manager with a heavy emphasis on his background in software development. He started the blog as heymans.org in 2006 and moved over to the journeymanpm.com URL for good in 2010, and posts at least once every two weeks. “Making my readers better [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Adevntures In Project Management by Brett Harned is a blog by the Philadelphia-based senior project manager of the same name who has an extensive list of experiences and clients in a web capacity to which he has supplied his services. In March 2010, Brett wanted to expand upon the lessons he’d taken from a life [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Keeping the Peace is a blog run by Margaret Meloni, a successful working coach and former PMO & project manager that is based in America after several years working in corporate roles, many of which included Fortune 500 companies. “The blog helps you keep the peace with tips and stories on how to become free [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Fixing Projects is a blog that premiered in May 2010 under the direction of Carol Long, CEO for Three Triangles Performance Ltd. Carol has experience as a programme and project manager, interim manager and consultant in high-tech, public and not-for-profit sectors. She specialises in assisting senior management get value from their project, and also has [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Aidan Kelly is a the blog run by the PRINCE2 project manager, chartered physicist and communicator of the same name. Aidan uses the blog, which he started in December 2010, to “share ideas and inspirations on project management, community development, technology and innovation. “My interest lies in understanding and working in the overlap of these [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Voices on Project Management is a PPM blog courtesy of the Project Management Institute recommended to us by blog leader Jill Cherpack of PMI. It’s believed to be the only PPM blog here on the community that originated in Warsaw. “Voices on Project Management was launched at a PMI Research Conference in Warsaw to share [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Freelancer Project Management is a PPM blog maintained by Jennifer Kantmere, who should know something about the matter herself. A freelance business writer and entrepreneur, Jennifer trained in public sector project management in the UK and left in 2008 to go it alone as a freelance project manager working with small-to-medium sized businesses. She now [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
The People and Projects Podcast is hosted by Andy Kaufman, PMP. Beginning in January 2009, People and Projects offer two episodes a month, featuring interviews and insights on leading people and delivering projects. To Andy, project management is more than a job – it’s a passion that can be applied in all walks of life. [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Manage By Walking Around is one of the more established members of our PPM blogosphere, having premiered in July 2006. The weekly-updated blog is run by Jonathan D. Becher, an active participant in the performance management community, a frequent speaker at industry conferences, and a published author on a multitude of subjects. “A primary goal [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
Leadership Solutions is a blog geared toward business professionals under the guidance and tutelage of Steve Kaye, an entrepreneur and professional speaker with a Ph.D in chemical engineering that puts particular focus in his brief daily postings on how to conduct effective staff meetings. Though Steve’s blog, which premiered in May 2007, does not often [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
QAspire Blog is edited regularly by Tanmay Vora, a Quality management professional who seeks the trends and tendencies in management and leadership with his blog. Starting in April 2006, Tanmay used QAspire to to delve into those two key aspects with short stories on those subjects. “I started the blog because I was passionate about [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
EarthPM’s oft-mentioned slogan is “at the intersection of Green and Project Management,” a power-packed credo for two veteran project managers left with an indelible imprint on the importance of resource sustainability. Rich Maltzman and Dave Shirley have worked primarily as project management practitioners in their respective 30 years of field experience, and in launching EarthPM [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
What’s the Word, Jellybird? is a blog run by Kimba Green, a veteran project manager who took to the job originally as a means to get through university. “My first project was the building of an ice cream shop and developing that business,” Kimba says. “The profit paid for my college expenses.” With an [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
The pm411.org Project Management Podcast is hosted by Ron Holohan, a Chicago-based Director of Programmer Management in audio manufacturing that frequently features some of the top names in PPM for his bi-weekly podcast. Ron tries to use the pm411 as both a blog and podcast to provide his audience with up to date best practices [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
International Project Management Communications is a new project management blog from Francis Norman focused on communications in international projects. Created in January 2010, Francis posts a series of articles discussing the various aspects and influences on successful international project communications and obstacles to being successful in the field Francis is a project manager and engineer [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post
The Critical Path, by Derek Huether is a project management leadership blog for both up-and-coming Project Managers and established Project Managers. Derek started Critical Path back in 2008 because he wanted to share his thoughts with a wider audience but felt that writing a book would take too long and be too tedious a process. [...]
Continue Reading...
Next post
Previous post