Resources
The resources domain addresses planning, acquiring, developing, and managing the people, equipment, materials, and facilities needed to deliver project outcomes.
Why this domain matters
Projects are delivered by people using tools, equipment, and materials. Effective resource management ensures that the right capabilities are available at the right time, without overloading key individuals or creating idle time. Poor resource management leads to bottlenecks, burnout, conflicts with functional managers, and missed commitments.
Key concepts
- Resource planning: identifying the types and quantities of resources required over time.
- Responsibility assignment: using tools such as RACI matrices to clarify who does what.
- Resource calendars: availability of team members, equipment, and facilities.
- Team development: building skills, cohesion, and motivation in the project team.
- Conflict management: resolving resource-related conflicts in a constructive way.
Common pitfalls and exam traps
- Assigning people to tasks without confirming their availability with functional managers.
- Overcommitting the same key resources to multiple critical activities at once.
- Ignoring team morale and treating people only as “resources” rather than individuals.
- Failing to update the schedule and plan when resource constraints change.
- Exam trap: immediately escalating conflicts instead of first using appropriate conflict resolution techniques.
PMP Example Question
PMP Example Question
A critical specialist is assigned to your project 50% of the time, but the functional manager later assigns them full time to another high-priority initiative. Your schedule depends on their expertise. What is the best action for the project manager to take?
- Ask the team to share the specialist informally and hope both projects can proceed.
- Update the schedule to reflect the reduced availability and do nothing else.
- Discuss the conflict with the functional manager and seek a mutually acceptable solution.
- Escalate immediately to the sponsor and request that the other project be delayed.
Correct Answer: C — Discuss the conflict with the functional manager and seek a mutually acceptable solution.
Explanation: Resource conflicts between projects are common in a matrix environment. The project manager should first engage the functional manager to understand constraints and negotiate alternatives, such as adjusted allocations or different resources. Updating the schedule without discussion or escalating immediately skips collaborative conflict resolution.
HKSM