Title: UN0603 Unit 3
1UN0603Unit 3
- Project Management Processes
Dr. J. Michael Bennett, P. Eng.,
PMP UNENE McMaster University, UOIT, The
University of Western Ontario Version 2K6-IX-18
2Revisions
- 2K6-IX-14 Initial Creation
- 2K6-IX-18 minor corrections (48,56,87)
3UN0603 Road Map
- Unit 1 Introduction to Project Management
- Unit 2 The Project Management Context
- Unit 3 Project Management Processes
- Unit 4 Project Integration Management
- Unit 5 Project Scope Management
- Unit 6 Project Cost Management
- Unit 7 Project Time Management
- Unit 8 Project Quality Management
- Unit 9 Project Human Resource Management
- Unit 10 Project Communications Management
- Unit 11 Project Risk Management
- Unit 12 Project Procurement Management
4Unit 3 TOC
- 3.1 The PMI Approach
- 3.2 PM Processes
- 3.3 Informal Intro to the Project Plan
- 3.4 The Project Charter
- 3.5 Selecting the Project Manager
5 3.1 The PMI Approach
- Project Management Institute
- HQed in USA
- Gives the PMP designation
- Huge multiple-choice test plus "points"
- Author of PMBOK
6The PMI View of Things
- Views Project Management as 9 key areas
- Project Integration is one
- Contract Management is another
- All interrelated
7The IPO Model
PROCESS
OUTPUT
8Process Groups Linkages
Controlling Processes
Executing Processes
9PMI Project Management (2K)
4 Project Integration Management 4.1 Project Plan
Development 4.2 Project Plan Execution 4.3
Overall Change Control
5 Project Scope Management 5.1 Initiation 5.2
Scope Planning 5.3 Scope Definition 5.4 Scope
Verification 5.5 Scope Change Control
6 Project Time Management 6.1 Activity
Definition 6.2 Activity Scheduling 6.3 Activity
Duration Est. 6.4 Schedule Development 6.5
Schedule Control
7 Project Cost Management 7.1 Resource
Planning 7.2 Cost Estimating 7.3 Cost
Budgeting 7.4 Cost Control
8 Project Quality Management 8.1 Quality
Planning 8.2 Quality Assurance 8.3 Quality Control
9 Project Human Resource Man. 9.1 Organizational
Planning 9.2 Staff Acquisition 9.3 Team
Development
12 Project Procurement Management 12.1
Procurement Planning 12.2 Solicitation
Planning 12.3 Solicitation 12.4 Source
Selection 12.5 Contract Administration 12.6
Contract Close-out
10 Project Communications Management 10.1
Communications Planning 10.2 Information
Distribution 10.3 Performance Reporting 10.4
Administration Closure
11 Project Risk Management 11.1 Risk
Identification 11.2 Risk Qualification 11.3 Risk
Response Dev. 11.4 Risk Response Control
10 3.2 Overview of Project Management (3rd Ed)
- Includes the processes requires to coordinate all
elements of the project - Will require tradeoffs from stakeholders
11PDCA Cycle (see quality section)
Do
Plan
Control
Act
12PMP PDCA
monitoring controlling
planning
closing
initiating
executing
13Flow Chart Legend (PMBOK 3rd E)
Enterprise Environment
Planning Process
Risk Planning
Process Group
Process
External to Process
14Summary of Process Interaction
15Initiating Process Group
Org Culture PMIS Human Resource Pool
SOW Contract
Initiating Process
Charter Prelim Scope
Policies Procedures Historicals LessonsLearned
Closing Process
16Planning Process Group
Charter Prelim Scope
Initiating Process
Planning Process
Project Plan
Closing Process
17Executing Process Group
Project Management Plan
Initiating Process
Deliverables Requested Changes Implemented CRs
Implemented corr acs Implemented prevents Defect
repair Work performance info.
Executing Process
Closing Process
18Monitoring and Controlling Process Group
Deliverables Requested Changes Implemented CRs
Implemented corr acs Implemented prevents Defect
repair Work performan info
Initiating Process
Approved/Rejected CRs Approved corr, prev acs
Approved def repair PMP, Scope Stmt updates
Reccommed corr, prev acs Performance reports
ForecastsValidated defect repair approved delivs
Executing Process
MonCont Process
Closing Process
19Closing Process Group
Approved/Rejected CRs Approved corr, prev acs
Approved def repair PMP, Scope Stmt updates
Reccommed corr, prev acs Performance reports
ForecastsValidated defect repair approved
delivs
Initiating Process
Executing Process
MonCont Process
Admin/contract closure procedure
Closing Process
20The Five Process Groups
- These are NOT project phases
- Describe whole project
- Also distinct subprojects or phases will use the
5 groups - For example, feasibility study, design,
prototype, etc.
21The Fab Five
- Initiating Process Group
- Planning Process Group
- Executing Process Group
- Monitoring and Control Process Group
- Closing Process Group
22The Fab Five
- Initiating Process Group
- defines and authorized the project/phase
- Planning Process Group
- defines/refines objectives builds the plan to
do the work (plan the work) - Executing Process Group
- integrates people and resources to do the work
(work the plan) - Monitoring and Control Process Group
- measures and monitors progress initiates
corrective actions as necessary - Closing Process Group
- formalizes acceptance of product (service).
Brings phase/project to an orderly end (even in
the face of failure)
233.2.1 Initiating Process Group
- The formal authorization of the project
- Need to justify the project
- Need to specify its objectives
- Project manager assigned
- Charter written
- Preliminary scope statement
24Project Boundaries
Project boundaries
monitoring controlling
planning
closing
initiating
executing
25Initiating Process Group
Develop Charter
Develop Preliminary Scope
26Planning Process Group
MCP
Develop PMP
IPG
Activity Definition
Risk Identification
XPG
CPG
27Executing Process Group
Acquire Team
Direct Project X
MCP
Team Development
CPG
28MC Process Group
XPG
29Closing Process Group
Contract Closure
30Mapping Processes to Groups and KAs
PG
KA
313.3 Informal Plans of the Project
- Ultimate goal is the Project Plan, the primary
document for directing the project - Will use other planning processes, especially the
Strategic Plan - Will need technical elaboration
- Normally will be baselined at the END of the
design phase unless the process is well-known
32- Plan is developed iteratively
- At each level, more detail is exposed until all
of the work is planned, estimated, scheduled and
authorized
33Purposes of the Project Plan
- Guide project execution
- Document project planning assumptions
- Document project planing decisions regarding
alternatives chosen - Facilitate communication among stakeholders
- Define key management reviews as to content,
extent and timing - Provide a baseline for progress management and
project control
34The Process
Inputs 1 Other planning inputs 2
Historical information 3 Organizational
policies 4 Constraints 5 Assumptions
Tools and Techniques 1 Project planning
methodology 2 Stakeholder skills and
knowledge 3 Project management information
system (PMIS) 4 Earned value
management
Output 1 Project plan 2 Supporting
detail
35Major Deliverables of the Project
- The Project Notebook
- Project Preliminary Proposal (PPP)
- Project Proposal (PP)
- Project Management Plan (PMP)
- Project Post Evaluation (PPE)
36The Project Notebook
- The Notebook is the total documentation of the
Project - The PPP, PP, PMP, PPE are here
- Note the following subplans are also embedded
here - 1 Communication Subplan
- 2 Risk Subplan
- 3 Quality Subplan
- 4 Implementation Subplan
- 5 Training Subplan
- 6 Installation Subplan
- 7 Acceptance Test Subplan
- 8 Maintenance and Support Subplan
- 9 Documentation Subplan
37The 3 Major Project Reports
- PPP Preliminary Project Proposal
- PP Project Proposal (charter scope)
- PMP Project Management Plan
- 110100 ratio
38Project Preliminary Proposal (PPP)
- Short, enthusiastic study of why do it at all?
- Rough cost, estimates (to about 100)
- State advantages to company
- Rough WBS to show feasibility
- Short, 5-10 pages
- PHB must be able to decide whether or not to
allocate additional funds for next phase - Measured in weeks
- Enough to get it pushed to the next stage
39Project Proposal (charter and scope)
- A detailed view for management of the objectives
of the project - A close (25) cost and time estimate
- A structural chart of the team
- Management will OK project start
- Good sized report (note 110100)
- Delivered near the end of the req phase
- Measured in months with lots of inputs
40Project Management Plan (PMP)
- Final carved-in-stone document
- Financial data to within 10
- Same for time, resource estimates
- Normally delivered at the end of the design phase
- PHB approval necessary for build phase
- Enormous document 500-2000 pages
- Time tied to reqs/design timings
- A cooperative effort by whole team
41Project Post Evaluation (PPE)
- Prepared 6-12 months after the end of the project
- Lessons learned, etc.
- Adjustments to pm database
423.4 Selecting the Project
- 3.4.1 Scoring Methods
- 3.4.2 Analytical Methods
- 3.4.3 Economic Methods
- 3.4.4 Portfolio Selection
- 3.4.5 Real Options Approach
433.4.1 Scoring Methods
- Idea here is to set up a model with which we can
compare relevant criteria - Typical would be cost, payoff, prob of success
- But could also be availability of people,
equipment, perceived value to the PM - (Paul Martin, that is! ? )
44Scoring Model
- Select Relevant Criteria
- Build the Model
- Rank Projects
45Some Good Ones
- Cost
- Prob of technical success
- Market size
- Availability of staff
- Strategic positioning
- Favourability of regulatory environment
- Payoff
- Prob of market success
- Market share
- Degree of org commitment
- Degree of competition
- Org policy considerations
4619 Criteria rolled into 6
47Building a Scoring Model
- Form of the model
- Value and important of criteria
- Measurement of criteria
48Form of the model
A(bBcCdD)(1eE)
Score
fF(1 gG)
- - A, B, C, D, E are benefits
- - F, G are disbenefits
- b,c,d,e,f,g are weights
- A,f,F are MANDATORY
49Simple Model
(Psxs 2Payoff)
SCORE
Cost
50Criterion Measurement skills set
- 10. All skills ample
- 9. All skills, no excess
- 8. All teks avail
- 7. Most teks avail
- 6. Some tek retraining needed
- 5. Some prof retraining needed
- 4. Extensive tek retraining
- 3. Extensive prof. retraining
- 2. All teks must be hired
- 1. All must be hired
51Rank Projects
- Must normalize to compare
- Standardize data by subtracting from each datum,
the mean over all the projects, and divide that
by the standard deviation - In reality, hard to do
52Example (simple model)
53SM Advantages
- Conceptually simple
- Are transparent
- They have been validated
- Easy to use
54SM Disadvantages
- Imaginary precision
- Potential lack of efficiency of scarce resources
- Time-consuming
553.4.2 Analytical Hierarchical Process
- Scoring model is one-level
- AHP incorporates subcriteria
56Example of AHP Decision Hierarchy
Score
Payoff
P(success)
Cost
Manufacturing Cost
Capital Cost
RD Cost
57AHP Advantages
- Simple procedure
- Visual hierarchies
- User friendliness
58AHP Disadvantages
- Subjective nature
- Complexity
- Difficulty of quantifying criteria
593.4.3 Economic Methods
60Net Present Value
- The value today of a future payment discounted at
an assumed rate - If that rate is positive, will make money
- Also called the Discounted Cash Flow
61Example cont
- NPV 100000/1.1 200000/(1.1)2 300000/(1.1)3
909,090 165,289 225,394 481,593 - Project costs 500K and will only earn 482K
- CAN IT
62Assumptions
- The 10 economy! If we had 0 for the 3 years, we
would have made 100K on our investment or 20 - The model assumes income projections. Where do
they come from and how realistic are they?
63IRR
- For what economy does the NPV cost?
- Get out the ol spreadsheet
64Excel Example
65Payback (Breakeven) Time
- At what month does the total earned revenue equal
the costs expended?
66The ROI Curve
673.4.4 Portfolio Selection
- Past 3 methods treat projects in isolation
- PS considers all projects in the context of the
org and its constraints (not just ) - Other constraints are
- Staff limitation
- Work space
- Computer time
- U-name-it
68Zero-Sum Game
- Have to allocate projects based on previous
rankings but also on availability of the other
scare resources - Too complex to go into here
69Tips on PS
- Higher management sets the organizational
criteria - Responsible departments establish the temporal
constraints - Higher management establishes policies that must
be satisfied
703.4.5 Real Options Approach
- Idea here is to factor in the uncertainty of the
estimates (either cost and/or payback) - Use metaphor of put and call stock folks call
this volatility. We call it RISK but the risk
can also be beneficial.
71Real Options and Volatility
Payoff-to-Cost
1.0
0.0
gtgt1
Low
Probably Never
Consider Initiating Now
Volatility
Possibly Later
Probably Later
High
723.5 Selecting the Project Manager
- 3.5.1 What do we need for the Team?
- 3.5.2 Some Questions to ask
- 3.5.3 Characteristics of a good PM
- 3.5.4 Where do we find the PM?
- 3.5.5 Detailed Skill set for the PM
- 3.5.6 Problem Situations
- 3.5.7 How NOT to Choose the PM
73Selecting the Project Manager
- 3.5.1 What do we need?
- We need
- A Project Manager
- An Assistant Project Manager
- A Project Office
- A Project Team
743.5.2 Questions in PM HR
- What are the requirements to become a successful
project manager? - Who should be a member of the project team?
- Who should be a member of the project office?
- What problems can occur during recruiting?
- What can happen downstream to cause the loss of
the PM?
75Leadership Styles
- The Dictator (authoritarian)
- The Best Friend (collegial)
- The Consensus Guy (team-oriented)
- The Emperor (military)
- The Democrat (interactive)
- The Parent
76Theory X and Theory Y
- X says that work is hell ands people will avoid
it whenever they can. Therefore employees must be
closely monitored and controlled - Y says people are naturally inclined to work and
only need favourable working conditions to blossom
773.5.3 General Characteristics of a PM
- The personal attributes and abilities of the PM
have the highest importance in the Project. Some
important characteristics are - trouble-liker but have honesty and integrity
- macro-micro focus ability (x16)
- understanding of people and technology
- business management competence
- alertness and quickness, stamina, toughness
- versatility, decision-making ability
- very thick skin
- able to live like a hermit for long periods of
time - possess a killer instinct
783.5.4 Sources for the Project Manager
- What are the internal sources?
- What are the external sources?
- How do we select amongst the choices?
- How do we provide PM career development?
- How can we develop PM skills?
- How do we evaluate PM Performance?
793.5 Ten Specific PM Skills
- 3.5.1 Team Building
- 3.5.2 Leadership
- 3.5.3 Conflict Resolution
- 3.5.4 Technical Expertise
- 3.5.5 Planning
- 3.5.6 Organization
- 3.5.7 Entrepreneurship
- 3.5.8 Administration
- 3.5.9 Management Support
- 3.5.10 Resource Allocation
803.5.1 Team Building
- The PM must nurture a climate with
- Team members committed to the program
- Good interpersonal relations and team spirit
- The necessary expertise and resources
- Clearly defined goals and program objectives
- Involved and supportive top management
- Good program leadership
- Open group communication
- Low degree of interpersonal conflict
813.5.2 Leadership
- Clear project leadership and direction
- Assistance in problem solving
- Facilitation of integration of new group members
- Ability to handle interpersonal conflicts
- Capability to plan and elicit commitments
- Ability to clearly communicate
- Presentation of the team to higher management
- Ability to balance technical solutions against
human and economic factors
823.5.3 Conflict Resolution
- Understand the interaction between organizational
and behavioural elements - Communicate effectively with all organizational
levels - Recognize the determinants of conflict and their
timing on the project life cycle (such as the
plans, contingency planning, securing of
commitments)
83 3.5.4 Technical Expertise
- The PM must have a solid understanding of
- Technology involved
- Tool and techniques employed
- Specific markets, their customers and
requirements - Product applications
- Technology trends and evolutions
- Relationship among supporting technologies
- People who are part of the technology community
843.5.5 Planning
- PM needs skills in
- Information processing
- Communication
- Resource negotiation
- Securing commitments
- Incremental and modular planning
- Assuring measurable milestones
- Facilitating top management involvement
853.5.6 Organization
- Must be a social architect
- Have to understand the ol patch
- Has to be plugged into networks
863.5.7 Entrepreneurship
- Have to be aware of strategic alignment
- In NGOs, be aware of customer satisfaction
873.5.8 Administration
- Have to be able to handle controls
- Need to understand corporate accounting
procedures - Have to understand the organizations standards
(e.g. FedGovs TSB EMF - (Treasury Boards Enhanced Management Framework
see website))
88 3.5.9 Maintaining Top Management Support
- PMs credibility
- Visibility of the project
- Priority of the project
- PMs accessibility
893.5.10 Resource Allocation
- May be attached from areas beyond the PMs
control - Must detail needs in the WBS and ensure
commitment - Need to watch staff turnover
90 3.5.6 Problem Situations
- Here are five interesting cases
- Part-time vs. Fulltime assignments
- Several projects assigned to one project manager
- Projects assigned to functional managers
- Project manager role retained by the general
manager - Multiple project managers
913.5.7 Choosing the Wrong PM
- Here are some unwise yet common criteria
- Maturity
- Hard-ball persons
- Availability
- Technical expertise (a two edged sword)
- Customer orientation
- New exposure
- Company exposure
92 3.8 Week ONE! (Youre in Charge- Now What?
Neff Critin 2005)
- Prepare yourself for the entrance
- Align expectations
- Shape your team (keepers, goners, watchers)
- Craft your strategic agenda
- Start transforming the culture
- Manage your handlers
- Communicate
- Avoid common pitfalls
93Common Pitfalls
- Setting unrealistic expectations
- Making rash decisions
- Suffering from the Hamlet Syndrome
(analysis-paralysis) - Being a know-it-all
- Being too chummy