Looking for a Project Manager to interview

WannaFly

Platinum Member
Jan 14, 2003
2,811
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I'm taking a masters level project management course and I need to do 2 12-15 page papers on analyizing a project that has been completed (not onthe same project). To do this, I need to find a PM willing to help me (3 so far thought they would, but have apparently changed their mind). I have a list of about 17 questions, and would like some pretty detailed infromation about a project that would be good to write a case paper on. I need to mostly focus on the scope and destripcion of the project, then the risks.

I know it's a long shot, but would anyone here be willing to help? I'd imagine It would take about an hour of your time, we can do it via IM/Skype/Phone or just through email. The problem is that I need enough information to put together the paper.

Thanks in advance to anyone that could help!
 

WannaFly

Platinum Member
Jan 14, 2003
2,811
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Odin: I assume you only read the post title, not looking to hire one..sorry.

Anyone else out there willing to help?
 

WannaFly

Platinum Member
Jan 14, 2003
2,811
1
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I'm gonna bump this one more time, to seeif anyone is willing to help...thanks again!
 

EagleKeeper

Discussion Club Moderator<br>Elite Member
Staff member
Oct 30, 2000
42,589
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I will try to assist - I may take some time to get you the info formatted properly based on your questions.
 

Jeff7

Lifer
Jan 4, 2001
41,596
20
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I'm in a 4th year project management class. :p
Business courses.....ugh. It's "Project Management for Engineers." The professor says that he likes teaching business to engineering students, because if he writes an equation on the board, he doesn't cause mass panic throughout the class.:laugh: What really tends to freak out the business crowd is when he uses an equation with S in it.

Compared to my other classes, it feels like 9th-grade material. So slow, so simplistic. The most complicated math consists of adding columns of data and multiplying by some other number. No advanced algebra, no calculus, just middle school math. So many of the case studies we read, and the issues that people have to resolve while on the job, it just feels like trying to deal with a crowd of kindergarten kids. People on the job seem to lack basic capacity for any individual problem resolution, and seem to be recalcitrant to alleviate boredom.