News

Symposium Papers Republished in PM World Journal

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Anyone who develops a paper for our annual two-day Project Management Symposium could get published in two different ways.  First, all papers developed are published under ISSN 2374-9377.  Papers developed from every symposium held to date are posted on the symposium website under Previous Symposiums.  Second, our media sponsor, the PM World Journal, selects between 6-12 papers for republication in their online journal.

Session speaker, Johnny Morgan, has had several papers published.  He commented that, “All three of my papers were picked up by the PM World Journal and republished in their online web publication so exposure has the possibility of going further than just the UMD Symposium and its associated website.”

Eight papers from the 2021 Symposium, were republished in the PM World Journal.  You can read the papers online at the links below.


Volume X, Issue V, May 2021

Performance Measure Reality Check
By Susan Hostetter, PMP and John Walsh, PMP (USA)

Volume X, Issue VI, June 2021

Building an Award-Winning, Metrics Based Program Management Office
By Nana P. Kwame (USA)

The Knowledge Cafe: Caffeinated Culture, Learning Agility in a Project Economy
By Benjamin C. Anyacho (USA)

The Evolution from Project to Business Manager
By Joseph A. Lukas (USA)

Volume X, Issue VII, July 2021

Testing Validity of Agile framework on Construction Project Management in the Middle East
By Jailane Atef Amer (Egypt/USA)

Why Good Execution is Not Enough
By Justin D. Jacobsen & Chris D. McLuckie (USA)

Volume X, Issue VIII, August 2021

Sustainable Development and Stakeholder Engagement: Lessons Learned from Infrastructure Megaprojects in Europe
By Ermal Hetemi, PhD (Sweden) and William A. Moyan, PhD

Retaining Agility When You Work in a Waterfall
By Jim A. Suits, MA, PMP (USA)

 

Eight papers from the 2020 Symposium, were republished in the PM World Journal.  You can read the papers online at the links below.


Volume IX, Issue VI, June 2020

Operationalizing resilience for Srinagar Smart City
By Omar Bashir (India)

Volume IX, Issue VII, July 2020

Challenges in construction project management as faced by millennials in developing countries
By Jailane Atef Amer (Egypt)

From Risk, to Issue, to Crisis: Is Your Program Prepared?
By Deidre C. Hicks (USA)

Volume IX, Issue VIII, August 2020

Best Practices for Managing & Engaging Project Stakeholders
By Prof Aurangzeb Z. Khan, PhD (Pakistan); Prof Miroslaw Skibniewski, PhD (USA); Prof John H. Cable (USA)

 Changing the World One Person at a Time
By Dr. Mark Reeson (UK)

Volume IX, Issue IX, September 2020

 When Will It Be Done? How to Forecast Answers to Your Toughest Agile Questions
By William Davis (USA)

The Use of Knowledge in Projects: A Discourse on Planning
By Deepak Shrikant (USA)

 Volume IX, Issue X, October 2020

BIM Implementation Practices of Construction Organizations in the UK AEC Industry
By Adedotun Ojo and Christopher Pye (UK)

 

UMD’s First “VIRTUAL” Project Management Symposium Deemed a Success!

Released on: June 20, 2020

The last minute change to a VIRTUAL delivery did not alter the outcome of the University of Maryland’s (UMD) annual Project Management Symposium held on May 7-8, 2020.  Amazing, wonderful, outstanding, awesome, fantastic, exceptional and exceeding expectations were some of the expressions used to describe the two-day event!  Survey results indicated that a whopping 99 percent of attendees stated they would attend another UMD Project Management Symposium as well as recommend the event to their colleagues.

Also gleaned from survey results were the top five reasons participants attended the event which included:

  • Gain insights I can implement
  • PDUs
  • Interesting Topics
  • Great Price
  • Learn or Sharpen PM Skills

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this year’s Symposium had to be converted from an in-person event to a virtual one in only five weeks. Thanks to amazing and adaptable speakers, UMD maxed out the number of sessions that could offered over the two days in a virtual environment.  This first-ever VIRTUAL Project Management Symposium featured four (4) keynotes and fifty-five (55) individual sessions in five (5) concurrent tracks.  A total of 64 different speakers presented on trending topics, best practices, lessons learned and case studies to five hundred and sixty project management professionals representing 273 different organizations from government, non-profits, industry and academia. “I was a little concerned about the virtual experience,” stated Laura Sharps, an Engineering Supervisor for Jacobs.  “However, UMD pulled it off exceptionally.  The content was awesome and I have lots of new ideas to take back to my team!”  Meisha Watkins, Strategic Initiative Project Manager for the U.S. Postal Service stated, “The 2020 symposium was the perfect intersection of practical industry application & theory.  Despite being online, I felt connected and ‘in the room’ with all of the speakers and moderators. Great job!”

Keynote speaker Mark Brown, Chief Operating Officer, Federal Student Aid, U.S. Department of Education kicked off the second day of the two-day live symposium on May 7-8, 2020.  

So how did the experience actually work?  All registered participants received instructions on how to access a password-protected online version of the VIRTUAL schedule.  That schedule included a description of each session, speaker photos and bios plus the WebEx links needed to participate in each session.  Attendees were able to review the schedule and select which session they wanted to join.  Participants were able to earn up to 11.25 PDUs during the two-days of the live symposium sessions.

“The ability to look at the agenda and have the option to hop from virtual room to virtual room was like intellectual shopping for your brain!” said Symone Mercado, Strategic Planning Project Manager from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. “Not only was each session insightful and clearly delivered (can I just say logistics were on point!), it was so much fun to have the freedom to really explore Project Management at my own pace. Overall, I was very impressed and would eagerly attend another session!”

Session speaker Sandra Menzies (top right), presented “Imrov to Improve.”  The screen shot above shows Sandra and  her demonstration team as they exposed symposium participants to Improv games to help them get out of their comfort zone and out of their heads to be in the moment in a safe and supportive manner.

Besides being able to attend the live sessions on May 7th and 8th, UMD recorded the speaker presentations and links to the recordings were posted on the password-protected online schedule.  This offered participants the opportunity to view any of the sessions they missed during the live event at their leisure later and the ability to earn an additional 33 PDUs. Cindy Miller, a teacher from Fairfax County Public Schools, said, “I Love the fact that I can ‘attend’ all sessions through recordings.  Generally, I would have to choose one session out of five for each track, but now I can benefit from all of them!” Lorelei Pate from the Baltimore Chapter of Women in Cable Telecommunications stated, “Wonderful event which worked perfectly online! This allowed for multiple PDU’s & learning to be gained not only in a deep dive during the 2 day live event but throughout the year at attendees own pace. Fantastic value!”

The change to a VIRTUAL environment also provided the opportunity for participants from outside of the DC Metropolitan area to easily attend.  Project Management Professionals from 28 states and 11 countries were able to participate with no risk of COVID exposure or any travel costs.  “It’s the best project management symposium that I never attended” said Shane Perkins, Director of Investment Realization at Aurelius Group in Sydney, Australia. “Going virtual meant that I could sit half-way around the world in my pajamas, and still participate and hear the latest ideas.” Roy Lafferty from the US Department of Agriculture indicated that “many of my USDA co-workers, along with myself, could not have attended if the event had been in-person.”

Despite the last minute change to an online event, the evidence is clear that UMD’s first VIRTUAL symposium was a success! Camille Hordatt, IT Project Manager at the Library of Congress, provided an excellent summary of comments received, “You delivered!  Truly awesome experience, obtained from my home in the year of COVID-19. A well planned and organized event and a great source of innovative and new information.”