Christchurch
Seminar 2003
To PMI Members and Project Managers
PMINZ has now arranged the Seminar 2003
series, with a seminar in Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch
by renowned international speaker and Project Management Professional
Arnie
Finklestein.
The seminar will be about "Managing
risk in IT projects" with special emphasis on runaway
projects, and what we can do to stop them happening. Due to
the nature of the seminar i.e. very hands on we can only provide
places for 25 attendees in each location. What are the details?
Date: Tuesday 18 Feb 2003 - 7:30 am to 5:00
pm
Venue: Chancellor 4, Hotel Grand Chancellor, Cashel Street,
Christchurch.
Cost: $320+ GST PMI members, $360+GST Non PMI members
Complete the Christchurch Registration
Form (pdf) and return it by 15 Feb 2003.
Remember there are only 25 places
available in each location – so first come first served
Registration forms for all locations must be
posted to
"Seminar Series 2003"
Project Conference Innovators
PO Boxes 13 494
Christchurch
About the Seminar
This is not your typical PM seminar!
Although the senior project management/directors
of a company are an important audience the seminar is geared
to project managers, line management executives and marketing
executives involved in either marketing hardware, software
and telecom projects (including contract development activities),
managing the business or IT clients or in selecting a project
management or systems integration vendor. Theseminar is designed
to present to Executives, Marketing Reps & Project Managers/Directors
a global perspective of the runaway project problem and provide
practical solutions for preventing the situation.
This seminar evolved from a major reality: that
many projects are lost because the project RFP, contract,
implementation strategy, organization structure, etc., was
flawed right from the beginning. The result is that the Project
Manager is handicapped and or the project is headed for failure
before it starts. The Project Manager needs to educate executives
and be involved before this situation happens.
By educating the audience and sharing their
own experiences the seminar is designed to assist in preventing
runaway projects and increasing the chances for success. During
the seminar we present and discuss real life situations, not
theory.
As Arnie says "My success with presenting
to project managers, corporate execs and vendor execs has
demonstrated that this seminar can assist tremendously with
acquiring manageable business, preventing runaway projects,
saving businesses millions of dollars and leveraging scarce
business/IT resources".
Regards
Phil Heaphy PMP
secretary@pmi.org.nz
|