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Time and Requisite Variety: Lessons from Project Management

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Title: Time and Requisite Variety: Lessons from Project Management


1
Time and Requisite VarietyLessons from Project
Management
  • Frank T. Anbari and Stuart A. Umpleby
  • The George Washington University
  • Washington, DC

2
The law of requisite variety
  • First described by W. Ross Ashby in 1952
  • Similar to game theory have a move to counter
    every possible move by an opponent
  • Time is a separate dimension not included when
    calculating variety

3
First version
  • The amount of selection that can be performed is
    limited by the amount of information available
  • Example Admitting students to college
  • What if there are five students and information
    on only three?
  • When all available information has been
    exhausted, do whatever you like.

4
Second version
  • The variety in the regulator must be at least as
    great as the variety in the system being
    regulated
  • Example Buy a computer with a capacity not less
    than the required task
  • Example In sports have a defense for every
    offense and seek to create novel offenses

5
Implication for management
  • When confronted with a task more complicated than
    one can cope with, there are two and only two
    choices
  • One Increase the variety in the regulator (for
    example by hiring more staff)
  • Two Reduce the variety in the system being
    regulated

6
Implementing the second strategy
  • The second strategy is surprisingly powerful
  • Reducing the variety in the system being
    regulated is possible because a system is a set
    of variables defined by the observer
  • That is, one can redefine the system so that it
    is manageable

7
Projects and Programs
  • A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to
    create a unique product, service, or resultMost
    projects are undertaken to create a lasting
    outcome.
  • A program is a group of related projects managed
    in a coordinated way to obtain benefits and
    control not available from managing them
    individually.
  • Project Management Institute (2004)

8
Rich, Long History ofProject Management (PM)
  • The Wheel
  • The Pyramids
  • The Great Walls of China
  • Roads, viaducts, Canals, and architecture
  • Defense systems
  • Computers and telecommunications
  • Medical and pharmaceutical projects
  • Space exploration and utilization

Sources Cleland, David I. The Societal
Contribution of Project Management, IPMA 17th
World Congress on Project Management, Moscow,
Russia June 4-6, 2003, and Anbari, F.T.
Romanova, M.V. Developing Competitive
Organizations trough Six Sigma, Innovation, and
Project Management, EURO / INFORMS Joint
International Meeting, Istanbul, Turkey, July
6-10, 2003.
Continued
9
Projects and Project Management
  • A project can be defined as a system that
    transforms inputs into outputs and has a feedback
    mechanism
  • ? The system to be regulated
  • The PM system (including the project manager and
    team) can be defined as
  • ? The regulator

10
A Systems Approach to Project Management
INPUT PROCESS OUTPUT
Integration Scope Time Cost Quality Human
Resources Communications Procurement Risk
Physical Human Conceptual
Physical Conceptual
Scope Time Cost Quality
FEEDBACK
11
Projects as Systems
  • Projects are Complex systems
  • May have a single or often multiple objectives
  • The objectives may have different priorities
  • Highly constrained usually with multiple
    constraints
  • Some objectives may also act as constraints
  • Systems dynamics and interventions by key
    stakeholders increase complexity of the project
    management system

12
Project objectives and constraints
  • Time and cost have traditionally been considered
    as the main constraints on projects
  • The triple constraint theory adds a third
    constraint (often called performance)
  • Scope, time, cost, and quality have been proposed
    as the quadruple objectives and constraints
  • Risk tolerance and resource availability may be
    added as constraints only

13
Quadruple Objectives / Constraints of Project
Management
Scope
Quality
Time
With proper prioritization of project
objectives F. T. Anbari, 1985, 2005
Cost
14
Prioritization of objectives Example
Time
Cost
Scope
Quality
Priority
First
Second
Third
15
Time and requisite variety
  • Previously in discussions of requisite variety,
    time was not considered because it was thought to
    be a different kind of variable
  • In the game theoretical formulation, requisite
    variety lists capabilities, which are executed in
    time
  • However, time is itself a capability or is a way
    to increase capability
  • This is a notion that was excluded in the
    original, formal, game theoretical interpretation
    of requisite variety

16
Time in project management
  • In managing projects, time is usually considered
    to be a critical (trade-off) variable
  • Taking more time often allows projects to be
    completed to satisfy other project objectives
  • The time constraint often affects the achievement
    of other project objectives
  • The common practice of "extending time" in
    project management calls attention to the formal
    interpretation of time in the cybernetics
    literature
  • A broader interpretation of time can bring
    cybernetics closer to other fields

17
The Correspondence Principle
  • Proposed by Niels Bohr when developing quantum
    theory
  • Any new theory should reduce to the old theory to
    which it corresponds for those cases in which the
    old theory is known to hold
  • A new dimension is required

18
  New Law of
requisite variety                
An Application of the Correspondence
Principle  
19
The law of requisite variety and project
management
  • The law of requisite variety can make important
    contributions to PM, since the PM system (or
    process) approach is becoming very widely
    accepted in PM
  • PM can make an interesting contribution to
    cybernetics and the law of requisite variety by
    appropriately addressing the time variable

20
Cybernetics and behavioral science
  • An advantage of cybernetics is that it sometimes
    lends itself to mathematical analysis, similar to
    game theory
  • Most of behavioral science is not expressed as
    axiomatic theories
  • Behavior occurs in time
  • Including time with requisite variety may lead to
    analyses closer to behavioral science

21
References
  • Anbari, F. T. (1985). A Systems Approach to
    Project Evaluation, Project Management Journal,
    Vol. XVI, No. 3, pp. 21 26.
  • Anbari, F. T. (2005). Innovation, Project
    Management, and Six Sigma Method. Current Topics
    in Management, Vol. 10, pp. 101-116, New
    Brunswick, NJ Transaction Publishers
  • Ashby, W. R. (1952). Design for a Brain The
    Origin of Adaptive Behavior. London Chapman
    and Hall.
  • Ashby, W. R. (1957). An Introduction to
    Cybernetics. London Chapman and Hall.
  • Checkland, P. (2000). Soft Systems Methodology A
    Thirty Year Retrospective. Systems Research and
    Behavioral Science, Vol. 17, Iss. S1, pp. S11
    S58.
  • Schwaninger, M. (2004). What can cybernetics
    contribute to the conscious evolution of
    organizations and society? Systems Research and
    Behavioral Science, Vol. 21, Iss. 5, pp. 515
    527.
  • Project Management Institute. (2004). A guide to
    the project management body of knowledge, (3rd
    ed.). Newtown Square, PA Author.
  • Umpleby, S.A. (2004). Strategies for Regulating
    the Global Economy. Cybernetics and Systems.
    Retrieved on October 22, 2005 from
    http//www.gwu.edu/umpleby/recent_papers/st_regul
    ating.htm
  • Umpleby, S. A. (2002). Should Knowledge of
    Management Be Organized as Theories or as
    Methods? The George Washington University.
    Retrieved on July 28, 2005 from
    http//www.gwu.edu/umpleby/recent_papers/2002_kno
    wledge_of_management_organized_as_theories_or_as_m
    ethods.htm
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