Title: IS 556 Enterprise Project Management
1IS 556 Enterprise Project Management
- Spring 2008
- Instructor Dr. Olayele Adelakun
- Lecture 1
2Project Communication
3Agenda
- Introductions
- Course Basics
- Course On Line
- Goals
- Topics
- Case Studies
- Assignments
- Participation
- Project Basics
- Project Management
- Program Management
- Project Management Office (aka Portfolio
Management Office) - Project Portfolio Management
4Introductions
- Instructor Olayele Adelakun
- History
- Work
- School
- Research
- Class
- Name
- Major
- Work Position
- Employer
- Interest in Enterprise Project Management
5Course Basics Course On Line (COL)
- Use for getting
- Assignments (4 homework, 1 paper, 1 take home
exam) - Written from the COL ASSIGNMENT SECTION
- Reading from the COL DOCUMENT SECTION
- Lecture notes USUALLY AVAILABLE DAY BEFORE
SESSION - Discussion forums (participation)
- Primarily for student exchange of ideas, problems
etc. - Emails to
- Classmates
- Groups
- Teacher
- Grades
6Participation Scoring
- For in class students
- Attendance is important
- For online (or DL) students
- Participation in the corresponding discussion
forum to the session before it closes or - Attendance in the class
- If neither is possible, submitting an article to
the class on a course topic covered in missed
lecture. - Scoring of the Discussion Forums takes place
after the forum closes
7Course Basics -- Goals
- By the end of the course the student will be able
to - Determine the major resources needed for an IT
project/program. - Understand basics in the Theory of Constraints
and the resource base theory. - Apply the basics of Critical Chain Project
Management. - Schedule monitor major resources to meet
milestones. - Understand the role of the Program Manager.
- Establish and monitor standards.
- Understand the basics of a Project Management
Office. - Apply the basics of IT project portfolio
management.
8Course Basics - Topics
- IT Project Management (IT PM)
- Project Management Book of Knowledge (PMBOK)
- IT Program Management (IT PgmM)
- IT Project Management Office (IT PMO)
- IT Portfolio Management Office (IT PfMO)
- IT Project Portfolio Management/ Portfolio
Prioritization - Theory of Constraints (TOC)
- Critical Path
- Critical Chain Project Planning
- Management of
- Architecture
- Assets
- Resources
- Knowledge
9Course Basics The Case Study
- Why the Case Study?
- Is a picture of the IT project management
landscape - Giving details on a specific IT projects related
- issues and
- problems
- Allows reflection on the interconnections and
complexities that a PM experiences - 2 substantive cases VistA (VA) and Sentinel
(FBI)
10Course Basics - Case Studies
- Your Job is to
- Analyze
- Explain
- Plan
- Understand view of various stakeholders
- Identify Problems
- Recommend solutions
- To do above, examine a case study
11Course Basics - Case Study Analysis Coverage
- 3 issue areas
- Technology
- What do we do?
- Technical Risks involved
- Project/Program management
- How will we do it?
- How will we staff it?
- How will we coordinate with other projects?
- Business
- Will this fit a business goal?
- Business risks involved
12Course Basics - Assignments
- 25 Final
- 20 Midterm
- 25 Group work
- 10 Participation -- attendance/makeup
(in class) -- discussion forum
participation (DL) - __________
- 100 Total
13Session Format
- Housekeeping Items
- Review of previous session using IClicker in
class students - Team exercise
- New material lecture
14Project Basics - Project Management
- What is a software project?
- Temporary endeavor undertaken to create a unique
product, service, or result.-Project Management
Institute - Characteristics
- Goal directed
- Collaborative
- Planned
- Finite
15Project Management
16Project Basics - Project Management
- What is Project Management?
- Application of knowledge, skills, tools,
methodologies, and techniques in order to meet
project requirements and meet or exceed
stakeholder needs and expectations. - Why stakeholder?
- Why not management, end users, clients?
17Project Basics - Project Management
- Project Stakeholders
- Stakeholders are the people involved in or
affected by project activities. - Stakeholders include
- Project sponsor
- Project manager
- Project team
- Support staff
- Customers
- Users
- Suppliers
- Opponents to the project
18Project Management Quick Easy!
19Project Basics - Project Management
The Triple Constraint of Project Management
Successful project management means meeting all
three goals (scope, time, and cost) and
satisfying the projects sponsor!
20Project Basics - Project Management
- The Triple Constraint
- Every project is constrained in different ways by
its - SCOPE goals What will be done?
- TIME goals How long will it take to do it?
- COST goals How much should it cost?
- It is the PMs duty to balance these 3
often-competing goals.
21Project Basics - Project Management
Project Management Framework
22Project Basics - Project Management
- 9 Project Management Knowledge Areas
- Describe the key competencies that PMs must
develop - 4 core knowledge areas lead to specific project
objectives (scope, time, cost, and quality). - 4 facilitating knowledge areas are the means
through which the project objectives are achieved
(human resources, communication, risk, and
procurement management). - 1 integrating knowledge area (project integration
management) affects and is affected by all of the
other knowledge areas. - All knowledge areas are important!
23Traditional Project Life Cycle Phases
24Relationships Among Process Groups and Knowledge
Areas
PMBOK Guide 2004, p. 69
25Project Basics - Project Management
- Tools and Techniques
- assist project managers and their teams in
various aspects of project management. - Specific tools and techniques include
- Project charters, scope statements, and WBS
(scope). - Gantt charts, network diagrams, critical path
analyses, critical chain scheduling (time). - Cost estimates and earned value management (cost).
26Project Basics - Program Management
- Projects and Program Managers
- Project Managers work with project sponsors,
project teams, and other people involved in
projects to meet project goals. - Program A group of related projects managed in
a coordinated way to obtain benefits and control
not available from managing them individually. - Program managers oversee programs and often act
as bosses for project managers.
PMI, A Guide to the Project Management Body of
Knowledge (PMBOK Guide) (2004), p. 16.
27Project Basics -- Project Management Office PMO)
- An alternative/addition to program management
- An organizational group responsible for
coordinating the project management function
throughout the organization. - Great flexibility in the PMOs
- Goals
- Structure
- Roles and Responsibilities
- Performs Project Portfolio Management (PPM)
28Project Basics -- Project Management Office PMO)
- A PMO is an organizational group responsible for
coordinating the project management function
throughout an organization. - Possible goals include
- Collect, organize, and integrate project data for
the entire organization. - Develop and maintain templates for project
documents. - Develop or coordinate training in various project
management topics. - Develop and provide a formal career path for
project managers. - Provide project management consulting services.
- Provide a structure to house project managers
while they are acting in those roles or are
between projects.
29PMO Project Management Office
- To be successful the PMO helps executives meet
the goals on which they are measured. The PMO - - drives more projects thru completion without
increasing resources, - sees projects completed in drastically shorter
time - influences all levels of the organization
- is perceived as useful by all organizational
levels
30The PMO and Organization
- Adopt a holistic approach
- PMO c/help with strategy execution through
project mix and flow - PMO s/have strong matrix relationship with
project mgrs - PMO c/help project managers accelerate projects
- PMOs tool is Project Portfolio Management (PPM)
31Project Portfolio Management
- Is Designed to Answer the Following
- How does a firm with multiple projects prioritize
them? - How does it make sure that the important ones get
done when planned? - How does a firm make sure that scarce resources
are deployed well? - How can projects deliver consistent, sustainable
results. - Executives are responsible for determining what
mix of projects get done and their priority - But how do executives get the information they
need to make their decisions?
32Problems with Project Management
- A look at what is going wrong with projects