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Government Extension to PMBOK® Guide – Third Edition

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Title: Government Extension to PMBOK® Guide – Third Edition


1
Government Extension to PMBOK Guide Third
Edition
  • Presented by
  • Petya Alexandrova, PMP
  • For
  • PMI Luncheon at Sky Line

2
Presentation Agenda
  • What is the Government Extension to the PMBOK
    Guide?
  • Project highlights.
  • Significant changes from previous version.
  • The benefits of using the Government Extension as
    a PMBOK Guide complement.

3
PMI Standards Background
  • 1996 PMI published the first Edition of A Guide
    to the Project Management Body of Knowledge
    (PMBOK Guide)
  • 1999 ANSI accredited PMI as a Standards
    Development Organization (SDO)
  • 2000 Published second edition of A Guide to the
    Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK
    Guide) 2000 Edition
  • 2002 Government Extension to a Guide to the
    Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK
    Guide) 2000 Edition
  • 2004 A Guide to the Project Management Body of
    Knowledge (PMBOK Guide) Third Edition

4
What is an Extension?
  • PMBOK Guide identifies generally accepted
    project management knowledge and practices.
  • Extensions identify generally accepted knowledge
    and practices in one application area.

5
Project Purpose and Objectives
Purpose Create a clear, concise and practical
document, to serve as a standard and reference
for Government Project Managers in conjunction
with the PMBOK Guide
  • Objectives
  • Align with the PMBOK Guide -Third Edition.
  • Add information pertinent to project Management
    in the public sector.
  • Be consistent in structure, style and content
    with the PMBOK Guide Third Edition

6
Intended Audience
  • Project Managers in the Government Sector
  • Team Members of a Government Project
  • Project Management Office
  • Functional Managers
  • Program and Portfolio Managers
  • Senior Executives
  • Project Auditors
  • Researchers

7
Team Structure
8
Process Overview
9
Why are Government Projects Unique
  • Legal Constraints on Government Projects
  • Laws, statutes, ordinances, directives,
    regulations, budgets, and policies
  • Accountability to the Public
  • Accountable to legislative judicial bodies,
    interest groups, press and public
  • Utilization of Public Resources
  • Objective is not higher ROI, but public good

10
Significant Changes Chapter 1 Introduction
  • Section 1.2.4 Why are Government Projects
    Unique? is significantly changed.
  • Standard applicable to ALL types of Governments.
  • Section 1.3 Project Management in the Government
    Context is expanded to discuss the role of the
    program/portfolio on project management.
  • Section 1.6.1 Programs and Program Management
    was substantially changed as programs have much
    more expanded role in the public sector.

11
Significant Changes Chapter 2 Project Lifecycle
and Organization
  • Titles and structure aligned with PMOBOK Guide
    Third Edition.
  • Section 2.3 Organizational Influences greatly
    expanded.

12
Significant Changes Chapter 3 Project
Management Process for A Project
  • No changes.

13
Significant Changes Chapter 4 Project
Integration Management
  • Four new integrative project management processes
    were added per PMBOK Guide.
  • Most considerations included in Government
    Extension 2000 Edition are now in PMBOK Guide
    and removed from this edition.
  • Organizational process asset project file, is
    introduced in Section 4.7 Close Project as
    having a particular relevance in government
    environment.

14
Significant Changes Chapter 5 Project Scope
Management
  • Section 5.1 Initiation from 2000 Edition moved
    to Section 4.1 Develop Project Charter, to
    mirror PMBOK Guide.
  • Section 5.2 Scope Planning introduces two
    overarching controls spending authority and
    public accountability.
  • Describes stakeholder analysis in government
    projects.
  • Section 5.4 Scope Verification introduces
    controls such as compliance and public
    accountability, and artifacts required.

15
Significant Changes Chapter 6 Project Time
Management
  • Introduces a specific activity resource
    requirement in terms of preference laws impacts.
  • Discussion on how funds redistribution influences
    schedule development.
  • Describes techniques, obligations or
    encumbrances, which help address the annual
    budget cycle constraint.

16
Significant Changes Chapter 7 Project Cost
Management
  • Section 7.2 Cost Budgeting discusses in detail
    the performance-based and gateway budgeting.
  • Adds the annual budget cycle to the inputs listed
    by PMBOK Guide Third Edition.
  • Adds split funding as a specific technique used
    for budgeting government projects.

17
Significant Changes Chapter 8 Project Quality
Management
  • Section 8.1 Quality Planning was significantly
    revised from previous version of the Government
    Extension.
  • Section 8.2 Perform Quality Assurance
    introduces regulatory requirements and guidance
    as a specific government quality assurance input.

18
Significant Changes Chapter 9 Project Human
Resource Management
  • The outputs section in 9.1 Human Resource
    Planning discusses authority delegation
    constraints in government environments.
  • Section 9.2 Acquire Project Team expands the
    discussion to include negotiation and hybrid
    staffing.

19
Significant Changes Chapter 10 Project
Communications Management
  • Section 10.1 Communications Planning discusses
    inputs and tools and techniques particular to
    government environment regarding external
    stakeholders.
  • Section 10.4 Manage Stakeholders focuses on
    information distribution to legislative
    organizations and the general public as specific
    stakeholders of public sector projects.

20
Significant Changes Chapter 11 Project Risk
Management
  • Section 11.1 Risk Management Planning discusses
    laws as limitation of risks acceptable to the
    public.
  • Adds and explains political risk as a new
    category in the outputs section.
  • Section 11.4 Quantitative Risk Analysis
    expresses the enhanced weighting of risks
    relating to social and environmental concerns for
    public sector projects.

21
Significant Changes Chapter 12 Project
Procurement Management
  • Section 12.1 Plan Purchases and Acquisitions
    includes an expanded discussion of additional
    categories of contract types.
  • Section 12.3 Request Seller Responses includes
    expanded comments regarding government tools and
    techniques.
  • Section 12.6 Contract Closure adds
    de-obligation of funds as a specific tool used in
    public sector.

22
Benefits for Project Managers
  • Identifies world-wide accepted standard practices
    for government projects.
  • Sets the context for Integrated Project
    Management Framework and Methodology in the
    Government Sector.
  • Increased awareness of Project Management
    discipline in legislative and executive bodies.
  • Enables easier and more efficient project
    relationships.
  • Sets common project-level practices for
    program-level monitoring and coordination.
  • Presents public sector approach and constraints
    to private industry partners, enabling better
    public-private sector partnerships.

23
Conclusions
  • The Government Extension to PMBOK Guide -Third
    Edition provides an account of key attributes of
    project governance that apply to most public
    sector organizations that are "generally
    recognized as good practice ... applicable to
    most projects most of the time," and with
    "widespread consensus about their value and
    usefulness".
  • It establishes a framework for ensuring effective
    and efficient management of projects in the
    public sector.
  • It does not provide how to guidance.
  • Project Management professionals should use both
    the Government Extension and PMBOK Guide
    documents in the execution of their
    responsibilities.

24
Questions and Answers
Petya Alexandrova, President Digital Enterpises,
Inc PetyaAlexadrova_at_4DEI.com
  • For additional information regarding GEU
    presentation
  • see PMIs web site www.pmi.org
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