Predecessors The first historically relevant year for the development of project management software was 1896, marked by the introduction of the Harmonogram. Polish economist
Karol Adamiecki attempted to display task development in a floating chart and laid the foundation for project management software as it is today. In 1912,
Henry Gantt replaced the Harmonogram with the more advanced
Gantt chart, a scheduling diagram that broke ship design tasks down for the purposes of Hoover Dam in early 1931. Today's Gantt charts are almost the same as their original counterparts and are a part of many project management systems.
Emergence of the term "project management" and modernized techniques The term
project management was not used prior to 1954 when
US Air Force General
Bernard Adolph Schriever introduced it for military purposes. In the years to follow, project management gained relevance in the business world — a trend that had a lot to do with the formation of the
American Association of Engineers AACE (1956), and Rang and DuPont's Critical Path Method, which has been used to calculate project duration ever since 1957. The trend is also related to the appearance of the
Program Evaluation Review Technique (PERT) in 1958. PERT advanced project monitoring, enabling users to simultaneously monitor tasks, evaluate their quality, and estimate the time needed to accomplish each of them. Like
Gantt charts and CPM, PERT was invented for military purposes, this time for the US Navy Polaris missile submarine program. In 1965, there was a new improvement in project management technology. The
US Department of Defense presented the
work breakdown structure (WBS) to dissolve projects into even smaller visual units, organizing them in a hierarchical tree structure. WBS was an inspiration for
Winston Royce’s Waterfall Method (1970) where management phases are organized in a way that doesn’t allow a new task to begin before the previous ones are completed.
The first project management products and associations In the period between 1965 and 1969, two of the leading project management associations were formed: the International Project Management Association (IPMA) in Europe, and the
Project Management Institute (PMI) which trains project management professionals and issues certificates. With businesses shifting towards technology-based and paperless methods, the first project management systems started to emerge.
Oracle and
Artemis launched their project managers in 1977, while Scitor Corporation did the same in 1979. Many improvements followed in the upcoming decades. In 1986,
Carnegie Mellon University’s
Software Engineering Institute introduced capability maturity software, a five-level project management method for rapidly maturing processes, while in 1988, users were introduced to earned value management which added processes’ scope and cost to the schedule. The trend continued with
PRINCE2 (1996) which increased the number of processes to seven, because of which developers considered designing products for managing complex projects. In 2001, they adopted the
Agile project management concept and focused on adaptive planning and flexible response to changes. In 2006, users were already able to trigger
total cost management, a framework that helps control and reduce costs in project management. ==Tasks and activities==