RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Resource
Management is the efficient and effective development of an organization's resources
when they are needed. Such resources may include financial resources,
inventory, human skills, production resources, or information technology (IT).
In the
realm of project management, processes, techniques and philosophies as to the
best approach for allocating resources have been developed. These include
discussions on functional vs. cross-functional resource allocation as well as
processes espoused by organizations like the Project Management Institute (PMI)
through their Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK) methodology of
project management. Resource management is a key element to activity resource
estimating and project human resource management. Both are essential components
of a comprehensive project management plan to execute and monitor a project
successfully As is the case with the larger discipline of project management,
there are resource management softwaretools available that automate and assist
the process of resource allocation to projects and portfolio resource
transparency including supply and demand of resources. The goal of these tools
typically is to ensure that: (i) there are employees within our organization
with required specific skill set and desired profile required for a project,
(ii) decide the number and skill sets of new employees to hire, and (iii)
allocate the workforce to various projects.[3]
Corporate Resource Management Process
Large
organizations usually have a defined corporate resource management process
which mainly guarantees that resources are never over-allocated across multiple
projects Peter Drucker wrote of the need to focus resources, abandoning a less
promising initiatives for every new project taken on, as fragmentation inhibits
results
Techniques
One
resource management technique is resource leveling. It aims at smoothing the
stock of resources on hand, reducing both excess inventories and shortages.
The
required data are: the demands for various resources, forecast by time period
into the future as far as is reasonable, as well as the resources'
configurations required in those demands, and
the
supply of the resources, again forecast by time period into the future as far
as is reasonable.
The goal
is to achieve 100% utilization but that is very unlikely, when weighted by
important metrics and subject to constraints, for example: meeting a minimum
service level, but otherwise minimizing cost. A Project Resource Allocation
Matrix (PRAM) is maintained to visualize the resource allocations against
various projects.
The
principle is to invest in resources as stored capabilities, then unleash the
capabilities as demanded.
A
dimension of resource development is included in resource management by which
investment in resources can be retained by a smaller additional investment to
develop a new capability that is demanded, at a lower investment than disposing
of the current resource and replacing it with another that has the demanded
capability.
In
conservation, resource management is a set of practices pertaining to
maintaining natural systems integrity. Examples of this form of management are
air resource management, soil
conservation,
forestry, wildlife management and water resourcemanagement. The broad term for
this type of resource management is natural resource management (NRM).
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