Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study

<p> A company or government is only as good as its most qualified employees. This qualitative interpretative phenomenological study sought to understand what skills are needed to supervise government information technology (IT) project managers through their lived experience. Fifteen participa...

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Main Author: Burns, Jacqueline
Language:EN
Published: Robert Morris University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10108949
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-101089492016-06-09T16:02:05Z Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study Burns, Jacqueline Management|Information technology <p> A company or government is only as good as its most qualified employees. This qualitative interpretative phenomenological study sought to understand what skills are needed to supervise government information technology (IT) project managers through their lived experience. Fifteen participants in the field of government IT were interviewed. They included five senior managers, five supervisors, and five project managers who worked as IT government contractors or employees were interviewed. The participants&rsquo; responses revealed that different groups disagreed as to what skill sets were essential in supervising government IT project managers. The findings of the research highlighted that the senior managers and supervisors valued skills from a macro-level perspective, while project managers valued skills from a micro-level perspective. The results of the study indicated that the different groups of IT employees&mdash;senior management, project managers, and supervisors&mdash;deemed different skill sets as essential. There was a consensus regarding the importance of communication skills as all groups included aspects of communication in the top-five essential skills. However, the rating number allocated to these skills and the definition of the terms differed between the participants and across the groups. The results of the study brings to light the importance of developing appropriate position training for government IT supervisory positions.</p> Robert Morris University 2016-06-04 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10108949 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Management|Information technology
spellingShingle Management|Information technology
Burns, Jacqueline
Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study
description <p> A company or government is only as good as its most qualified employees. This qualitative interpretative phenomenological study sought to understand what skills are needed to supervise government information technology (IT) project managers through their lived experience. Fifteen participants in the field of government IT were interviewed. They included five senior managers, five supervisors, and five project managers who worked as IT government contractors or employees were interviewed. The participants&rsquo; responses revealed that different groups disagreed as to what skill sets were essential in supervising government IT project managers. The findings of the research highlighted that the senior managers and supervisors valued skills from a macro-level perspective, while project managers valued skills from a micro-level perspective. The results of the study indicated that the different groups of IT employees&mdash;senior management, project managers, and supervisors&mdash;deemed different skill sets as essential. There was a consensus regarding the importance of communication skills as all groups included aspects of communication in the top-five essential skills. However, the rating number allocated to these skills and the definition of the terms differed between the participants and across the groups. The results of the study brings to light the importance of developing appropriate position training for government IT supervisory positions.</p>
author Burns, Jacqueline
author_facet Burns, Jacqueline
author_sort Burns, Jacqueline
title Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study
title_short Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study
title_full Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study
title_fullStr Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Critical Skills for Supervisors of Information Technology Project Managers in Government| An Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis Case Study
title_sort critical skills for supervisors of information technology project managers in government| an interpretative phenomenological analysis case study
publisher Robert Morris University
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10108949
work_keys_str_mv AT burnsjacqueline criticalskillsforsupervisorsofinformationtechnologyprojectmanagersingovernmentaninterpretativephenomenologicalanalysiscasestudy
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