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In the eye of the beholder: Opening the black box of the classification process and demystifying classification criteria selection

Pooria Niknazar (Department of Mathematics and Industrial Engineering, Polytechnique Montreal, Montréal, Canada)
Mario Bourgault (Department of Mathematics and Industrial Engineering, Polytechnique Montreal, Montréal, Canada)

International Journal of Managing Projects in Business

ISSN: 1753-8378

Article publication date: 4 April 2017

341

Abstract

Purpose

Projects have high stakes in how they are categorized. The final place of a project within a classification scheme depends on the inclusion or exclusion of certain classification criteria. So far, many researchers and organizations have used a variety classification criteria to construct different project classification schemes. However, most of these classification criteria have been taken for granted and the process of selecting them to categorize projects still remains a black box. The purpose of this paper is to open the black box of classification process and explain how it is reflected in picking the classification criteria.

Design/methodology/approach

Drawing on insights from cognitive psychology’s literature, the authors examine the main views of classification process to provide insight into the unknown or implicit reasons that one might have to pick particular attributes as project classification criteria.

Findings

The authors argue that classification occurs in the eye of the beholder; it is not only the project’s features per se but also the classifier’s “goals, ideal and preference” or “knowledge of causal relations” that are reflected in the classification criteria.

Research limitations/implications

By elaborating the classification process, the authors brought the project context into the big picture of classification and provide a more rational, and coherent picture of how project classification works. This contributes to a theoretical blind spot, raised by prior researchers, related to the selection of project classification criteria.

Practical implications

Understanding classification processes will reduce the ambiguities, inconsistencies and multiple interpretations of project categories and help practitioners increase their projects’ visibility and legitimacy within an already established classification scheme. These implications help organizations in addressing some of the main obstacles to using categorization in project management practice.

Originality/value

The review of prior work in the category research literature and the insights from this paper will provide project management scholars with a useful toolbox for future research on project classification, which has long been understudied.

Keywords

Citation

Niknazar, P. and Bourgault, M. (2017), "In the eye of the beholder: Opening the black box of the classification process and demystifying classification criteria selection", International Journal of Managing Projects in Business, Vol. 10 No. 2, pp. 346-369. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJMPB-07-2016-0061

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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