4.2.1 Personnel resources
The Project Manager (Co-ordinator) needs to be appointed to take charge of a project.
The Project Manager is a project champion who ensures all activities is planned, co-ordinated and directed towards achieving the project objectives.
The Project Manager makes t he project function smoothly - in terms of time and costs especially and performance in terms of the customer's specifications being met.
The Project Manager + Project Personnel = Project Team.
The Project Manager co-ordinates the efforts of the project personnel, steering the activities of project personnel and relying on them for information, quality performance and the management of their own work load. This demands the co-operation of everybody as a team. As instructions are issued from one phase to the next, information must be fed back along a communication channel to signal that the results are appropriate. Thus, everybody involved with the project shares in the outcomes and knows the effects of their efforts.
Members of teams must strive to meet common goals, each being aware of their part in the chain of events that brings the project to fruition. Where twenty people working separately are coping with many projects simultaneously, the absence of a few workers with sickness may require significant rescheduling of the project plan.
In a team approach, multiskilling enables team members to assume functions when a colleague is absent. Thus, a disaster can be averted and the project should come in on time and budget. The team approach requires that members' become part of a team effort, so that if the flu strikes three, the other seventeen can carry the project in their absence. A project team cannot be a number of independent production groups. It must be multiskilled and flexible, working towards a shared goal.

Figure 2 Project team and performance