Title:
1Project Management 101
- Your Cookbook for Victory
2What we will cover
- Definition of a Project
- Why have project controls
- PM as a profession
- Project reporting
- Milestone management
- Crystal ball - the foreseeable future
- The Ultimate CYA
- Damage control.
3What we will cover in Project Management 102
- Cookbook approach to a project
- Resources identification
- Timeline constraints
- Risk management
- Management of managers and vendors
- MS Project vs. paper tracking
- Contract negotiations
4What is a project?
- A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to
create a unique product or service. Temporary
means that every project has a definite beginning
and a definite ending. Unique means that the
product or service is different in some
distinguishing way from all other products or
services. PMBOK 2000 edition
5Why Have Project Controls?
- 92 of all projects fail (Standish Research
Group)
6What Professional Project Managers do and why
- Project Management Institute was established to
promote the professional management of projects
using proven methods and procedures. - PMI maintains a library of information and
publishes the Guide to the Project Management
Body of Knowledge (PMBOK), the standard text on
project management.
7(No Transcript)
8Great Britain PM Standard
- Prince 2. Government required standard
- http//www.ogc.gov.uk/prince2/index.html
9What is involved in managing a successful project?
10Project Triple Constraints
11Project Triple Constraints
Costs
12Project Triple Constraints
Costs
Time
13Project Triple Constraints
Costs
Time
Statement of Work (SCOPE)
14Project Triple Constraints
Costs
Time
Quality
Statement of Work (SCOPE)
15Project Triple Constraints
Costs
Time
Quality
Statement of Work (SCOPE)
Customer Satisfaction
16How to practically approach a project
- Projects can be approached like baking a cake.
17Chocolate CakeWhat it takes
- Clear objectives
- Ingredients
- Equipment
- Manpower
- A Plan
- A manager of managers (PM)
18Chocolate Cake
- Making a chocolate cake requires all the
elements of a project - Processes (What to do)
- Knowledge (How to do)
19Process groups of a project(The What to do of
a project)
- Initiation
- Planning
- Execution
- Controlling
- Closing
- Called the Life Cycle of a project
20Knowledge areas (The How to do of a project)
- Project Scope Management
- Project Time Management
- Project Cost Management
- Project Quality Management
- Project HR Management
- Project Communications Management
- Project Risk Management
- Project Procurement Management
- Project Integration Management
21(No Transcript)
22Work Breakdown Structure (Planning phase)
- Def. A deliverable-oriented hierarchical
decomposition of the work to be executed by the
project team to accomplish the project
objectives. It organizes and defines the total
scope of the project. Each descending level
represents an increasingly detached definition of
the project work. The decomposition consists of
work packages. (PMBOK 2000)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26(No Transcript)
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31(No Transcript)
32Work breakdown structure.
- DefDeliverable oriented grouping of project
components that organizes and defines the total
scope of the project. - Locate managers and ask them to estimate their
labor requirements, constraints and risks. - Give them the project scope with budget, schedule
and milestone requirements. - Dont you make these decisions let them.
33Work Packages
34Event sequencing
- Placing work packages in logical sequential
order. - Create a critical path
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38(No Transcript)
39(No Transcript)
40(No Transcript)
41(No Transcript)
42(No Transcript)
43(No Transcript)
44(No Transcript)
45(No Transcript)
46(No Transcript)
47Project Tracking Software
- Microsoft Project
- Uses Project Management Institutes PMBOK as its
standard - Excellent tool IF used properly
48Gantt Chart with resources
49Pert Chart
50Resources
51Crystal Ball - Looking into the foreseeable
future
- Earned Value is a method of forecasting the
projects cost and scheduling outcomes early in
the project - It uses various budgeted amounts (time and
costs) currently spent early in the project and
weighs them against planned amounts for the
same period. - Outcomes project budget or schedule variances at
projects end.
52http//www.goldpractices.com/practices/tev/index.p
hp
53Project stakeholders
- Definition Anyone who is positively or
negatively affected by the project. - Could be
- A person(s)
- A company (vendors)
- A department
- A social order
- A government
54Communications Planning - Your Ultimate CYA
- People operate with the information they are
given. - Clear directives produce clear results.
- Clear objectives produce desired results.
- Every stakeholder needs to know the status of the
project. - PM is the single person who sees it all.
55Communications Plan
- Preferred learning styles
- Visual (65)
- Auditory (33)
- Kinesthetic feelings (tactile and emotional) (
lt3) - PMs should address all three to be effective.
- Tools of the trade
- Voice mail
- Emails
- Audio recordings
- Website
- Conference calls
- Group meetings (last resort)
56Techniques on how to communicate.
- Always start with the bottom line.
- Color code each milestone or work Category.
- GreenOn time/on budget.
- YellowPotential problems if not addressed
immediately. - RedImmediate attention required. Milestone
and/or project in jeopardy. -
57Email
- Subject line
- Cake project status All critical paths are
Green - Text
- All critical paths are reporting green.
- For details www.vanek.ws/project/cake
- For audio www.vanek.ws/project/cake/audio
- Or dial (713)555-1234
- For MS Project plan
- www.vanek.ws/project/cake/msproject
58Email
- Subject line
- Cake project status Yellow due to critical path
procurement issues - Text
- Procurement warns of shortage of special order
cake pans. Vendor working problem. Update by
tomorrow . - For details www.vanek.ws/project/cake
- For audio www.vanek.ws/project/cake/audio
- Or dial (713)555-1234
- For MS Project plan
- www.vanek.ws/project/cake/msproject
59Email
- Subject line
- Cake project status Red. All stakeholders
/conference call 300PM Today - Text
- Major issue with procurement. Conference call
today at 330PM (800) 555 1234 password 2323.
Roll call will be taken. Attendance required.
Prepare by having risk response for your area. - For details www.vanek.ws/project/cake
60Damage control
- People cause problems, people fix problems.
- Effective communications is the key.
- POP management (point of the problem)
61Summary
- Projects are managed Pro-actively
- Project Managers have a cookbook which is the
recipe for a successful project. - Planning and Communicating are the most critical
elements. - Questions?
62(No Transcript)
63FAILURE RECORD In the United States, we
spend more than 250 billion each year on IT
application development of approximately 175,000
projects. The average cost of a development
project for a large company is 2,322,000 for a
medium company, 1,331,000 and for a small
company, 434,000. A great many of these
projects will fail. Software development
projects are in chaos, and we can no longer
imitate the three monkeys -- hear no failures,
see no failures, speak no failures. The
Standish Group research shows a staggering 31.1
of projects will be canceled before they ever get
completed. Further results indicate 52.7 of
projects will cost 189 of their original
estimates. The cost of these failures and
overruns are just the tip of the proverbial
iceberg. The lost opportunity costs are not
measurable, but could easily be in the trillions
of dollars. One just has to look to the City of
Denver to realize the extent of this problem.
The failure to produce reliable software to
handle baggage at the new Denver airport is
costing the city 1.1 million per day.
Based on this research, The Standish Group
estimates that in 1995 American companies and
government agencies will spend 81 billion for
canceled software projects. These same
organizations will pay an additional 59 billion
for software projects that will be completed, but
will exceed their original time estimates. Risk
is always a factor when pushing the technology
envelope, but many of these projects were as
mundane as a drivers license database, a new
accounting package, or an order entry system.
On the success side, the average is only
16.2 for software projects that are completed
on-time and on-budget. In the larger companies,
the news is even worse only 9 of their projects
come in on-time and on-budget. And, even when
these projects are completed, many are no more
than a mere shadow of their original
specification requirements. Projects completed
by the largest American companies have only
approximately 42 of the originally-proposed
features and functions. Smaller companies do
much better. A total of 78.4 of their software
projects will get deployed with at least 74.2 of
their original features and functions.
This data may seem disheartening, and in fact,
48 of the IT executives in our research sample
feel that there are more failures currently than
just five years ago. The good news is that over
50 feel there are fewer or the same number of
failures today than there were five and ten years
ago.
64(No Transcript)