
Microsoft (R) Office Project Server 2007: The Complete Reference
Osborne/McGraw-Hill (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 16. March 2008
Book
Paperback/Softback
672 pages
978-0-07-148599-9 (ISBN)
Description
Publisher's Note: Products purchased from Third Party sellers are not guaranteed by the publisher for quality, authenticity, or access to any online entitlements included with the product.
"Microsoft Office Project Server 2007 is an extremely advanced and dynamic toolset requiring fundamental organizational inspection. Rob and Dave provide an equally deep and unique perspective of this powerful solution." --Daniel T. Renier, Principal Consultant, Milestone Consulting Group, Inc.
"Microsoft Office Project Server 2007 is an extremely advanced and dynamic toolset requiring fundamental organizational inspection. Rob and Dave provide an equally deep and unique perspective of this powerful solution." --Daniel T. Renier, Principal Consultant, Milestone Consulting Group, Inc.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Publishing group
McGraw-Hill Education - Europe
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Illustrations
350 Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 189 mm
Thickness: 36 mm
Weight
1092 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-07-148599-9 (9780071485999)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Dave Gochberg is the Enterprise Project Management Center of Excellence lead for CDW Berbee. He has been in IT for over 17 years and in consulting for 12 of those years. He has held positions that include technical and management positions. He also has extensive Project Management experience.
Rob Stewart is a Microsoft Solutions Specialist for CDW Berbee and has eight years of experience implementing Microsoft's Enterprise Project Management toolset in the private, public, and government sectors. Prior to joining CDW Berbee, he was the Director of Information Technology for a leading software development company based in W. Michigan.
Rob Stewart is a Microsoft Solutions Specialist for CDW Berbee and has eight years of experience implementing Microsoft's Enterprise Project Management toolset in the private, public, and government sectors. Prior to joining CDW Berbee, he was the Director of Information Technology for a leading software development company based in W. Michigan.
Content
Part I: Consider This Before You Commit to Project Server 2007
Chapter 1. What Your CFO Needs to Know about Project Server
Chapter 2. The New Architecture of the Microsoft EPM Environment
Chapter 3. New Features and Some That Have Been Retired
Part II: Plan for Your Project Server 2007 Implementation
Chapter 4. Building Blocks for Implementation Success
Chapter 5. Requirements, Prioritization, and Project Planning for Project Server
Part III: Details on the Installation and Configuration of Project Server 2007
Chapter 6. Installation of Project Server 2007 and Prerequisite Software
Chapter 7. SharePoint Central Administration in a Project Server Environment
Chapter 8. Configuring Security in Your EPM Environment
Chapter 9. Configuring Enterprise Data Settings
Chapter 10. Configuring Time and Task Management
Chapter 11. Configuring Look and Feel Settings
Chapter 12. Configure the Remaining Server Settings
Chapter 13. Roll Out the Desktop
Part IV: Project Server 2007 Maintenance
Chapter 14. Performance of Your EPM System
Chapter 15. Application/Database Migration from Previous Versions
Chapter 16. Techniques and Solutions for New Project Requests
Chapter 17. Integrating Project Server 2007 with External Systems
Part V: Project Server in Action
Chapter 18. Time Tracking and Task Updates
Chapter 19. Reporting and Views
Chapter 20. Resource Management
Chapter 21. How the Project Manager Interacts with Project Server
Chapter 22. How the Team Member Interacts with Project Server
Chapter 23. How the Resource Manager Interacts with Project Server
Chapter 24. The Executive and Miscellaneous Rolls
Chapter 25. Project Server 2007--Doing More for Collaboration and Communications
Part VI: Program and Portfolio Management
Chapter 26. Program Management
Chapter 27. Project Portfolio Management
Index
Chapter 1. What Your CFO Needs to Know about Project Server
Chapter 2. The New Architecture of the Microsoft EPM Environment
Chapter 3. New Features and Some That Have Been Retired
Part II: Plan for Your Project Server 2007 Implementation
Chapter 4. Building Blocks for Implementation Success
Chapter 5. Requirements, Prioritization, and Project Planning for Project Server
Part III: Details on the Installation and Configuration of Project Server 2007
Chapter 6. Installation of Project Server 2007 and Prerequisite Software
Chapter 7. SharePoint Central Administration in a Project Server Environment
Chapter 8. Configuring Security in Your EPM Environment
Chapter 9. Configuring Enterprise Data Settings
Chapter 10. Configuring Time and Task Management
Chapter 11. Configuring Look and Feel Settings
Chapter 12. Configure the Remaining Server Settings
Chapter 13. Roll Out the Desktop
Part IV: Project Server 2007 Maintenance
Chapter 14. Performance of Your EPM System
Chapter 15. Application/Database Migration from Previous Versions
Chapter 16. Techniques and Solutions for New Project Requests
Chapter 17. Integrating Project Server 2007 with External Systems
Part V: Project Server in Action
Chapter 18. Time Tracking and Task Updates
Chapter 19. Reporting and Views
Chapter 20. Resource Management
Chapter 21. How the Project Manager Interacts with Project Server
Chapter 22. How the Team Member Interacts with Project Server
Chapter 23. How the Resource Manager Interacts with Project Server
Chapter 24. The Executive and Miscellaneous Rolls
Chapter 25. Project Server 2007--Doing More for Collaboration and Communications
Part VI: Program and Portfolio Management
Chapter 26. Program Management
Chapter 27. Project Portfolio Management
Index