Invention

Project Manager

The U.S. military invented project management to build weapons that were too complex for any single department.

United States · 1950s
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Project management as a formalized discipline emerged in the 1950s from the U.S. defense and aerospace industries. The scale and complexity of Cold War weapons programs demanded coordination methods that no existing management structure could provide. In 1957, the DuPont Corporation and the Remington Rand Corporation developed the Critical Path Method (CPM) for managing plant maintenance projects.1 The same year, the U.S. Navy developed the Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT) to manage the Polaris missile submarine program, a project involving more than 3,000 contractors.2

These tools created the possibility of a new role: a person responsible for coordinating work across departments and disciplines without having direct authority over any of the people doing the work. The project manager was neither the technical expert nor the executive. The role existed in the space between, ensuring that interdependent tasks were completed in the correct sequence and on schedule.

The Project Management Institute (PMI) was founded in 1969 to establish standards for the emerging discipline.3 Its Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK), first published in 1996, became the standard reference for the field.

3,000
Contractors coordinated by the U.S. Navy's Polaris missile program, one of the first formally managed projects

Henry Gantt, an associate of Frederick Taylor, had created the Gantt chart around 1910 as a visual tool for scheduling industrial tasks.4 The chart, which displayed tasks as horizontal bars along a timeline, became a foundational tool of project management and remains in widespread use over a century later.

PMI reported more than one million members in 2023 across more than 200 countries.5 The role has expanded far beyond defense contracting into software development, construction, consulting, event planning, and virtually every industry that organizes work into discrete, time-bound efforts.

c. 1910
Henry Gantt created the Gantt chart as a visual scheduling tool for industrial tasks.
1957
DuPont developed the Critical Path Method and the U.S. Navy developed PERT for the Polaris program.
1969
The Project Management Institute was founded to establish professional standards.
1996
PMI published the first edition of the PMBOK Guide, standardizing the discipline.
1 James E. Kelley Jr. and Morgan R. Walker, "Critical-Path Planning and Scheduling," Proceedings of the Eastern Joint Computer Conference (Boston: IRE-AIEE-ACM, 1959).
2 Harvey Sapolsky, The Polaris System Development (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1972).
3 Project Management Institute, "About PMI."
4 Peter Morris, The Management of Projects (London: Thomas Telford, 1994).
5 Project Management Institute, Annual Report 2023.
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