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Spring 2006
This issue leads with records and information management, a necessary process that will help to fine tune an organization’s core capabilities and incorporate them into the business practices. Also featured is an article on the ups and downs of enterprise architecture. The featured case study, “Anniston Production Performance Scorecard Revolutionizes Anniston Army Depot” describes how the depot used the balanced scorecard for enhanced decision making,

Summer 2005
In this issue, the lead article is an executive-level implementation guide to enterprise performance management (EPM). It outlines six steps to successful implementation of EPM. The featured case study, “Marine Corps Logistics Bases Earn Real Value: Financial Issues and Competition Prompt Modernization”, describes how EPM was used to make the organization more accountable.

Spring 2005
Good corporate governance must be implemented at every level of the organization. Visionary organizations that lead the market develop and implement governance structures, overarching strategies, and management schemes that sustain and support the corporate vision. This issue addresses how this method extends past executive management levels and how its effects impact the entire enterprise. Also, using lean to transform your enterprise and weave a solid program into your initiatives.

Winter 2004
Optimizing processes is a guaranteed way for organizations to achieve their objectives faster than they dreamed possible. This issue tells how the Transportation Security Coordination Center took this solution to heart, starting with an empty building with no facilities, utilities, or security -- and turning it into a state-of-the-art facility with systems enabling intelligence gathering on the hundreds of airports, thousands of trucks, and thousands of miles of rail and pipeline in this country.

Fall 2004
This issue is all about the fastest way to the finish line. The lead story, "The PMO Makes Everything Go," discusses the value of a program management office for federal executives—and 10 steps for making it work. And the white paper, "Six Sigma Pumps Up PM," examines eight ways the Six Sigma methodology makes PM even more effective.

Summer 2003
Selecting the vendor and then managing the outsourced effort seems like it should be simple, but it’s deceptively complicated. Most likely, vendor selection will take too long, cost too much, and achieve too little. This issue explains how to avoid these problems and how you and your vendor can make the most of your relationship.

Spring 2003
This issue examines how organizations can prepare for a disaster that could disrupt their operations--and why the best business continuity plans are the simplest to understand.

Winter 2002
The world is getting more competitive, whether you’re responsible for developing state-of-the-art technology or choosing a desktop shipping solution. This issue shows how program management helps the bottom line.

Summer/Fall 2002
This automotive-focused issue discusses how project management processes improved GM’s priority setting, resource allocation, and conflict resolution. It also examines how information management deflects legal issues for automotive companies.

Spring 2002
Organizations everywhere--commercial and federal--have to do more with less. Portfolio management is a way to make better-informed decisions about which projects to cut and how to reappropriate funds and increase earnings per share.

Winter 2001
Project management mentoring can enable organizations to take control of their programs, ensuring that they achieve their objectives for scope, quality, time, cost, and stakeholder satisfaction.

Fall 2001
Performance-based government is here but many agencies aren’t sure how to proceed. This issue spells out steps to success.

Summer 2001
With the use of rapid product development methodologies, Robbins-Gioia helped two companies develop an artificial heart and a breast cancer diagnosis device.

Spring 2001
This merger-and-aquisition-focused issue talks about a large merger that was successfully completed in 90 days with the use of program management methodologies.

Fall 2000
Processes, periodic reviews, and metrics are essential to optimizing the operational support costs of systems-whether aircraft or computers.

Summer 2000
In the post-Y2K (and 9/11) world, it is critical that organizations protect their most important resource--knowledge.

Spring 2000
Y2K preparation was the springboard for many organizations to prepare IT strategic plans



 

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