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You Can

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You Can't Afford. NOT to Plan. Alexia P. Idoura. Tri-Doc 2005. 2. Problem ' ... Planning is making decisions you have to make at some point anyway, but doing so ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: You Can


1
You Cant Afford NOT to PlanAlexia P. Idoura
Tri-Doc 2005
2
Problem
  • We dont have enough time to do it right just
    enough time to do it over.
  • Senior Executive of Global Fortune 1000 company,
    2003
  • Planning is making decisions you have to make at
    some point anyway, but doing so early,
    methodically, and with a purpose.

3
Assumptions
  • Weve done this before, so we dont need to plan
  • Planning isnt part of our corporate culture
  • Were a start-up, we cant plan
  • They wont give us time to plan
  • No one reads the plan anyway
  • We dont have any control over anything
  • What other assumptions have you run into?

4
What does the planning process look like?
  • Creating the plan
  • Reviewing and revising the plan
  • Dont stop here!
  • Maintaining the plan
  • Closing the project

5
Who gets involved in planning?
  • Manager
  • Team lead
  • Team members
  • Contributors from various functional areas
  • Reviewers from various functional areas

6
When do you plan?
  • Usually depends on your project lifecycle
  • As early as possible, even if you dont plan to
    start working yet
  • When supporting information is available (if its
    not, document it)

7
What makes a good plan?
  • Depends on your audience, goals, etc., same as
    any other type of document you write
  • Write plan to goal, not just random collection of
    information information with a purpose
  • The right balance of information not so much
    that its too hard to create and maintain, and
    not so little that its essentially useless as a
    tool
  • A plan can be a single document or a collection
    of documents, depending on the complexity of the
    project, level of detail, disparity of the
    audience, etc.

8
Creating the plan
  • Whos your audience?
  • Decision makers
  • Stakeholders
  • Responsible parties
  • What are your goals?
  • Based on those answers, what should you include?
  • See list of ideas
  • Whats missing?
  • Organize into one or more documents, usually
    based on
  • Project management (schedules, resources, etc.)
  • Content management (file formats, architecture,
    media, etc.)

9
Reviewing and revising the plan
  • Who should review the plan?
  • What should happen during the review?

10
Maintaining the plan
  • This is where we start neglecting the planning
    process
  • See, I planned and X, Y, and Z still happened
  • Weekly, review and update as necessary
  • Scope changes
  • Schedule changes
  • Deliverable changes
  • Variances
  • Open issues and risks
  • Progress report
  • Change control
  • What else?

11
Closing the project
  • When the project is done, do a final review and
    update of the plan
  • Highlight major changes in scope, etc.
  • Summarize lessons learned and share that
    information

12
Questions?
13
For more information
  • Greer, Michael. The Managers Pocket Guide to
    Project Management. Amherst, MA HRD Press, 1999.
  • Hackos, JoAnn T. Managing Your Documentation
    Projects. New York John Wiley and Sons, Inc.,
    1994.
  • Tremmel, Martina A. Developing a Documentation
    Planning Template. intercom, May 2004 22-23.
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