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Technical Program Manager's Handbook

You're reading from   Technical Program Manager's Handbook Unlock your TPM potential by leading technical projects successfully and elevating your career path

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781836200475
Length 368 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Joshua Alan Teter Joshua Alan Teter
Author Profile Icon Joshua Alan Teter
Joshua Alan Teter
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: What Is a Technical Program Manager? FREE CHAPTER
2. Fundamentals of a Technical Program Manager 3. Pillars of a Technical Program Manager 4. Career Paths 5. Section 2: Fundamentals of Program Management
6. An Introduction to Program Management Using a Case Study 7. Driving Toward Clarity 8. Plan Management 9. Risk Management 10. Stakeholder Management 11. Managing a Program 12. Emotional Intelligence in Technical Program Management 13. Section 3: Technical Toolset
14. The Technical Toolset 15. Code Development Expectations 16. System Design and Architecture Landscape 17. Harnessing the Power of Artificial Intelligence in Technical Program Management 18. Enhancing Management Using Your Technical Toolset 19. Other Books You May Enjoy
20. Index

Deciding when to build a program

Now we know what a program and project are, but the discussion has involved defining the boundary using a pre-existing program as an example. As a TPM, one of your jobs will be deciding when a program needs to be created and whether it is appropriate to the needs of your organization to do so.

From a project perspective, knowing when to create one is straightforward – you receive requirements to deliver a new application or service, a new feature, and so on, and you create a project to deliver on those requirements. Projects can be done standalone and do not need to be part of a larger program. In many industries, this is how almost all work is done: through independent and discrete projects.

However, knowing when a program should exist is a bit more nuanced and depends on the situation. There are two avenues through which a program is created: from the beginning when requirements are determined and during project executions where a...

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