Title: Project Management Methodology Overview * * YIKES! What does
1Project Management Methodology Overview
2Agenda
- What is a project and why do we need methodology?
- The main processes of Project Management and the
related deliverables - Sample project
- Tools to make project management easier
3Michele Raupp, PMP
- University of Illinois graduate
- 11 years in Marketing and Advertising
- Television
- Newspaper
- Cable
- Diversified company
- 10 years in the IT industry
- COBOL, Visual Basic, JCL, Lotus Script
- Project Coordination, Implementation, Staff
Management
4Project Management
- Project management is the discipline of
organizing and managing resources in such a way
that the project is completed within defined
scope, quality, time and cost constraints. A
project is a temporary, one-time endeavor
undertaken to create a unique product or service,
which brings about beneficial change or added
value. This property of being a temporary and
one-time undertaking contrasts with processes, or
operations, which are permanent or semi-permanent
ongoing functional work to create the same
product or service over and over again. The
management of these two systems is often very
different and requires varying technical skills
and philosophy, hence requiring the development
of project management.
5Project Management
- Project management is the discipline of
organizing and managing resources in such a way
that the project is completed within defined
scope, quality, time and cost constraints. A
project is a temporary, one-time endeavor
undertaken to create a unique product or service,
which brings about beneficial change or added
value. This property of being a temporary and
one-time undertaking contrasts with processes, or
operations, which are permanent or semi-permanent
ongoing functional work to create the same
product or service over and over again. The
management of these two systems is often very
different and requires varying technical skills
and philosophy, hence requiring the development
of project management.
6Project Management
- Project management is the discipline of
organizing and managing resources in such a way
that the project is completed within defined
scope, quality, time and cost constraints. A
project is a temporary, one-time endeavor
undertaken to create a unique product or service,
which brings about beneficial change or added
value. This property of being a temporary and
one-time undertaking contrasts with processes, or
operations, which are permanent or semi-permanent
ongoing functional work to create the same
product or service over and over again. The
management of these two systems is often very
different and requires varying technical skills
and philosophy, hence requiring the development
of project management.
7Points to Remember
- A project is temporary.
- A project is a one-time endeavor.
- Tasks are managed to ensure they are completed
within time, scope, and cost constraints.
Triple Constraint
8Project Management
- Project management is the discipline of
organizing and managing resources in such a way
that the project is completed within defined
scope, quality, time and cost constraints. A
project is a temporary, one-time endeavor
undertaken to create a unique product or service,
which brings about beneficial change or added
value. This property of being a temporary and
one-time undertaking contrasts with processes, or
operations, which are permanent or semi-permanent
ongoing functional work to create the same
product or service over and over again. The
management of these two systems is often very
different and requires varying technical skills
and philosophy, hence requiring the development
of project management.
9Project Lifecycle
Project Management Route
Application Development Route
10Main Processes
- Initiation
- Planning
- Executing
- Controlling
- Closing
Based on PMBOK
11Initiation
- The purpose of the Project Initiation Phase is to
specify what the project will accomplish. As part
of Initiation, you will define project
objectives, scope, purpose and deliverables to be
produced. You will also determine your project
team, review the project, and gain approval to
proceed to the next phase of the project,
Planning.
12Initiation Project Activities
- Describe project
- Determine value
- List objectives and measures of success
- Identify governance
- Develop estimates
- List assumptions
- List risks
- List constraints
- List dependencies
13Initiation - Deliverables
- Project Charter - This deliverable defines the
project objectives, contains high level estimates
for what is needed to achieve those objectives
and gives approval for resources to be assigned
to the project.
14Planning
- The purpose of Project Planning is to determine
what needs to be done, by whom, and by when, in
order to complete the project. It also details
the processes that the project manager will use
to manage the project.
15Planning Project Activities
- Define Scope
- Create Schedule
- Define Budget
- Quality Planning
- Quality Control
- Quality Assurance
- Communication Planning
- Risk Planning
- Change Planning
- Resource Planning
16Planning - Deliverables
- Project Plan
- Schedule
- Quality Plan
- Communication Plan
- Risk Plan
- Change Plan
- Resource Plan
17Execution and Control
- The purpose of the Execution and Control phase of
the project is to manage the delivery of the
products and services. - The project plan is executed and the team
completes the activities identified in the
project schedule. - The Project Manager monitors and reports project
progress and takes corrective action when needed. - Project Management tools used during execution
and controlling include risk, issue, quality and
change control documentation and procedures.
18Execution and Control - Project Activities
- Manage Issues
- Manage Change
- Manage Risks
- Manage Schedule
- Manage Communications
- Manage Quality
- Manage Procurement
- Manage Resources
19Execution and Control
Project Management Route
Application Development Route
20Execution and Control - Deliverables
- Products and Services
- Supporting Facilitating Documentation
- Product Development Lifecycle Deliverables
21Closing
- The purpose of the Project Closing phase is to
ensure that project documentation is completed
and those items requiring further attention or
support are transitioned appropriately before
closing the project. This phase - Concludes all project activities
- Administratively closes the project
- Turns the delivered product or service over to a
support group - Assesses project outcomes and team performance
- Documents and operationalize best practices and
lessons learned - Celebrates project success.
22Closing Project Activities
- Gather Lessons Learned
- Create Project Summary
- Administrative Closeout
- Celebrate!
23Closing - Deliverables
- Project Management Toolkit improvements/updates
- Recommendations to other processes
- Project Summary
24Sample Project Website Redesign
- Initiation
- What is it and why are we doing it?
- What will the project create/implement?
- How will the success of the project be measured?
- Keep in mind that the measure of success here is
not how many people use Illinois in a Box, but
rather does the project meet the objectives and
did it come in on time and on budget. - What are the risks and issues?
25Sample Project Website Redesign
- Planning
- What are the tasks that need to be completed?
- How long will they take?
- What is the budget?
- How will communications be managed? Risks?
Issues? - How will change requests be handled?
26Sample Work Breakdown Structure
27Sample Project Website Redesign
- Executing and Controlling
- Begin the work to create the new website
- As issues and risks occur, refer back to Issue
and Risk Management Plans - Follow Communications Management Plan for
communicating project statuses - Manage changes
28Sample Project Website Redesign
- Closing
- Complete all activities
- Document Lessons Learned
- Turn finished product over to area that will have
ultimate responsibility for it - Assess success, measure objectives
- Celebrate!
29What makes Project Management Easy
- Templates
- Repeatable processes
- Some processes are optional
- Quality is built-in
- Time spent up front in planning
- Proper planning prevents problems
- Less costly to fix mistakes early in the project
- Lessons Learned
- Update methodology and templates
- Feedback for next project
30Wrap-up
- A project is
- Temporary
- A one-time endeavor
- Regulated by the Triple Constraint
- IPECC
- Project Management Methodology can be applied to
anything - Special thanks to Bradford Neavear, Rick Getty
and Daryl Fritchey