Title: EM660 PROJECT MANAGEMENT
1EM660 PROJECT MANAGEMENT
2Class 4 Agenda
- Case Study 1
- Presentation
- Chapter 11 Planning
- Smart Objectives
- Note chapters 11 12 will comprise a large
portion of your final project. More on that
later.
3Planning
- The most important responsibility of the project
manager is planning, integrating and executing
project plans. - The finished plan allows you to walk through the
project and get it organized before the work is
actually done. - 1) Determines if the project charter can be done.
- 2) Shows how the project gets accomplished.
- 3) Planning saves time, resources and money.
4Project Plan
5Project Plan
- At a minimum, a project plan answers basic
questions about the project - Why? - What is the problem or proposition
addressed by the project? Why is it being
sponsored? - What? - What is the work that will be performed
on the project? What are the major
products/deliverables? - Who? - Who will be involved and what will be
their responsibilities within the project? How
will they be organized? - When? - What is the project timeline and when
will particularly meaningful points, referred to
as milestones, be complete?
6Show WWTP Project Charter
7Project Planning Control
8Planning Responsibilities
- Project Manager
- Goals, Objectives, Milestones
- Requirements, Ground rules, Assumptions
- Time, Cost Performance Constraints
- Procedures, Policies Reporting
- 2) Line Manager
- Work Task descriptions to implement project
- Schedules and Manpower Allocations
- ID areas of concern, risk, uncertainty, conflict
- 3) Project Sponsor
- Chief Negotiator, Clarifier, Communicator
9Objectives
- Since project planning is a shared
responsibility, project objectives are really
joint efforts. - Some common problems are
- Not everyone agrees with the objectives
- Priorities change objectives are too rigid
- Not enough time to do proper planning
- Objectives dont have measurements
- Objectives are not well defined documented
- Project team and end customer not in sync
- Project personnel have other assigned duties
10Objective Requirements Analysis
- What work elements are needed to satisfy
objectives how are they interrelated? - Who will do the work and what is required?
- Are enough resources available in-house?
- How will project info communication flow?
- This analysis will create four important project
planning outputs (p. 425) - Statement of Work (SOW)
- Project Specifications
- Major Milestone Schedule
- Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
11Statement of Work
- The statement of work (SOW) is a narrative
description of the work to be accomplished. - SCOPE defines what is and is not included in the
project flushes out the needs of stakeholders. - OUTPUT A scope statement by which project
performance is measured. - The scope needs to be carefully worded or the
project closure phase may end in conflict.
12Project Standards
- A project standards (specifications) list
describes where man-hour, equipment and material
estimates come from. - Often, there are legal or regulatory requirements
to which organizations or customers must adhere
to do business. - Specifications are standards for pricing out
proposals. They can come from published sources
or historical data from prior projects.
13Milestone Schedules
- A project milestone schedule
- will contain
- Project start date
- Project end date
- Major milestones
- Report dates or scheduled reviews
- These dates can be either forward-generated by
the work content or backward-generated by a
required due date (trade show or roll-out).
14Work Breakdown Structure
- The work breakdown structure (WBS) is an
expansion of the project objectives defines - All effort to be expended.
- Responsibility of specific work elements.
- The schedules budgets for those elements.
- The WBS is not a Gantt chart or Pert networks,
but rather a very detailed list of work to
complete a project.
15WBS Format
- Total Program (multiple current projects)
- Project
- Task
- Subtasks
- Work Package
- 1. Level of Effort
- You see where this is goingadd some times
instant schedule. But the devil is in the
details.
16WBS Decomposition
- Before we start linking work tasks into a
network, the work elements need broken down into
the smallest details possible. - Why?
- It keeps you from forgetting stuff.
- Provides better time and cost estimates.
- Sometimes work has a specific sequence something
needs to be done 1st. - Changes or additions, once the project network is
established, are usually costly.
17Network Diagrams
- Network diagrams just show sequencing and
dependencies and are not yet schedules. - Figure 11-3 shows good examples.
18Network Diagrams
19Network Diagrams
- It is at this point that the project and
functional managers start examining where the
work, time and cost elements are piling up can
be spread out to get a better project flow. - Formal authorization is granted once the triple
constraint elements are fully determined.
20Simple Task List-Start of House II
21Simple Network from Tasklist
- LS of B?
- ES of B?
- ES of C?
- LS of C?
- EF of E?
- ES of D?
- LS of D?
- Slack Time of C?
- Slack Time of B?
- Critical Path?
- Possible Paths?
- Path Duration
- A-B-E 15
- A-C-E 21
- A-D-F-E 24
- Critical Path is A-D-F-E with largest duration
equal to 24
22Simple Network from Tasklist
23Critical Path A-D-F-E Shown in Sequence
24Latest Start of B?
Earliest Start of B?
25Latest Start of C? C must finish before E starts
Earliest Start of C? A must finish before C starts
26Earliest Finish of E? (24 d.)Earliest Start of
D? (day 4)Latest Start of D? (day 4)
- For days on the critical path the earliest start
and latest start times are the same.
27Slack Time of C? (7-4 3 days)Latest Start of
C? (day 7)
Earliest Start of C? (day 4)
28Slack Time of B?Latest Start of B Day 13
Earliest Start of B Day 4 Slack Time of B 13
9 4 days
29Detailed Schedules
- NOTE Well cover network scheduling techniques
presentations in chapters 12 13. - The scheduling of activities is the next major
requirement after go-ahead authorization. - Activity schedules show how resources are being
used and allow what if, trade-off, schedule
crashing fast tracking to draw in the final
project completion date create budgets.
30Master Production Scheduling
- An offshoot of the project schedule is the Master
Production Schedule (MPS). The MPS is a statement
of - What will be made.
- How many units will be made.
- When it will be made.
- The MPS compares the demand on a plants
resources against the available capacity. The MPS
is a very important step must coincide w/the
project dates promised to the customer.
31Master Production Scheduling
- A Master Production Schedule or MPS is the plan
that a company has developed for production,
inventory, staffing, etc. It sets the quantity of
each end item to be completed in each week of a
short-range planning horizon.
32- NOTE We are only about halfway done with the
project planning elements necessary prior to
project execution. Were not making anything yet,
but were thinking about it at this point. - We still have to consider
- Price, costing, trade-offs (CH 14, 15, 16)
- Risk planning and management (CH 17)
- Purchasing contract management (CH 19)
- Quality standards and requirements (CH 20)
- These items are also planning components.
33Configuration Management
- Configuration management is a formal change
review and approval process. It provides a focal
point of input for internal and external parties
wishing to add changes to the project. - The change requests need to be evaluated against
the triple constraints (cost, time, scope). - - What is the cost of the change is it
justified? - What is the impact to the delivery date?
- Do the changes preserve/improve quality?
34Project Bottlenecks
- Hurry up and wait The client wants the
project to begin - as soon as possible, so you work overtime
to get the scope - document, budget, and timeline together.
But when you are ready, the client fails to make
its resources information and people
available in a timely manner. - Scope creep You work overtime to meet the
client's expectations, even though their
expectations included deliverables that weren't
part of the original scope discussion. This is
especially problematic for fixed-price contracts. - Endless brainstorming Sometimes the client
has an idea of what they want you to discover
during the course of a project, and if you don't
find it, they want you to try again. - Two departments, one project objective
Sometimes, especially at larger companies, you
get involved in a project and you find out that
another department is working on a similar
project. - Late or no payment Some consultants fail to
set proper payment expectations with clients,
resulting in an excessively delayed payment.
35Planning recommendations
- Identify the project champion, they can
- 1-Ensure that you have access to client staff
and information to prevent bottlenecks that could
affect your project timeline. - 2-Gather feedback on project hypotheses by
researching findings and status from within the
organization as a litmus test for how other
client executives might react. - 3-Identify any other projects within the
organization that have similar objectives. You
want to make sure that the client resources are
being used effectively and that any complementary
efforts are coordinated. - 4-Establish clear project scope
- 5-Clearly outline the project timeline
- 6-Define how to handle billing issues
- 7-Present your project plan in a kickoff meeting
- 8-Maintain clear communication
36Project Champion Definition
- A project champion is an individual who has the
authority to use resources within or outside an
organization for completion of a given project. A
project champion is chosen by the management so
as to ensure supervision of a specific project
from its initiation phase to its execution phase. -
37MS Projects Tutorial
38Next time
- Well work on Network Diagrams and Graphics and
review the project handouts. - Case Study 2 Feb 12th
- Project proposals are due March 5th.
- Network Homework is 12-14 12-17 Due Feb 19th