Title: ICT Project Management
1ICT ProjectManagement
- A survival guide
- Dr Christopher OMahony
- Head Centre for Information Technology
- St Ignatius College, Riverview
2In summary
- This presentation shares some examples of IT
projects in schools, and hopefully shares some
tips on how to survive the IT Project
battleground. - Good News and Bad News
- Some wider context
- A cynical view
- Key learnings
- A sample case study
- Some useful links
3The presenter
- Christopher OMahony
- Head Centre for IT, St Ignatius College,
Riverview - In school IT management roles since 1997
- PhD research in school management information
systems, IT evolution, IT evaluation,
organisational culture - Involved in various IT projects such as
- Management information systems
- Library systems
- Voice-over-IP
- SAN / DDT
- ISP
- Reprographics
4The good news
- The fact that this conference is happening, and
that this topic is included, is indicative of the
growing professionalism among school IT
management. - Most of us, during our tenure in these positions,
will be involved to a greater or lesser extent in
IT projects. - Increasingly in schools, other organisational
units are looking to IT managers for robust
methodologies and discipline, rigour and
objectivity in capital projects. - BUT
5The bad news
- In the 1990s, the average life span of a senior
IT manager was about 900 days. - A common cause of IT manager casualty is failed
IT projects. - Aalders, R., Hind, P., (2002) The IT Managers
Survival Guide, Chichester, UK John Wiley
Sons. - Industry analysis tells that MOST IT projects
fail - For example
- UK NHS 4 years over time, GBP 10 billion over
budget - Australian Customs 4 weeks container processing
backlog on implementation
6Defining project failure
- Project abandonment
- Cost overruns
- Time overruns
- Incomplete implementation / functionality
- Major causes
- Degree of user involvement
- Executive management support
- Project management experience
7Smaller initiatives fare better at reaching goals
than larger projects do.
(Courtesy Information Age, 2005)
8(Courtesy Information Age, 2005)
9(Courtesy Information Age, 2005)
10(Courtesy Information Age, 2005)
11Project Management Truths
A cynical view
- Never underestimate the ability of senior
management to buy a bad idea, and fail to buy a
good idea. - Quantitative project management is for
predicting cost and schedule overruns well in
advance. - Project meetings are events where minutes are
kept, and hours are lost. - We build systems like the Wright brothers built
airplanes build the whole thing, push it off a
cliff, let it crash, and then start all over
again.
12Project Management Truths
A cynical view
- Projects happen in two ways (a) Planned and
then executed or (b) Executed, stopped, then
planned and executed. - Good project management is not so much knowing
what to do and when, as knowing what excuses to
give and when. - Some projects finish on time in spite of project
management best practices. - Users dont know what they want until they get
it. Then they know what they DONT want.
13Key learnings
- Successful projects have demonstrable discipline,
rigour and objectivity - Link all IT projects to the IT Strategic Plan
avoid unplanned projects - Different leadership types on a project team (eg
Business, IT, Academic) have different dynamics,
and these need to be managed - Engage senior management in all major projects
14Key learnings
- There is rarely a pure IT project
- Clarify whos driving
- Be wary of resourcing assumptions
- Prioritise your projects
- Build in plenty of milestones and progress
meetings - Avoid scope creep
- Talk straight
- Learn how to say No
15One Case Study School MIS project
- The case for change
- Building project approval
- Governance and team structure
- Internal stakeholder consultation
- External enquiries
- The Tender
- Phase 1 - evaluations
- Phase 2 - presentations
- Phase 3 Selection and contract
- Conversion and trial
- Go live
- Post implementation
16The case for change
- 2004
- Business Office driving the call for change
- Areas requiring review
- Fees Billing
- Registrations Admissions
- Foundation and OIU
- School shop
- Facilities
- Assets
17Project approval
- Early 2004
- Business Case presented to
- IT Committee
- Finance Committee
- College Council
- Initial rule-of-thumb budget approved
- Project Team established
- External support from industry professionals
18Evaluation Governance Team Structure
IT Steering
Committee
Project Steering Committee
Ongoing Support
Business Requirements
Implementation Plan
Price
Commercial
G Conlon K Corbett
G Conlon C OMahony
G Conlon C OMahony
G Conlon K Corbett
G Conlon C OMahony L Holden (P2) B Peatman
(P2) K Corbett (P2)
19Stakeholder consultation
- Term 1 2004
- Questionnaires to all stakeholders
- Focus Group meetings
- What have we got that must be retained?
- What have we got that must be dumped?
- What have we NOT got that we must have?
- What have we NOT got that wed like to have?
- Broad email enquiries to other ADAPE members
20Evaluation from ADAPE members
21The Tender
- Stakeholder consultation in Term 1 informed
Requirements Specification - Clear expectations of tender respondents
- Closed tender
- Incumbent invited to respond
22Longlist to Shortlist
- Make your tender document self-scoring
- Use quantitative analysis to justify selection /
rejection - Score each dimension
- Weight each dimension
- Consider price last
- Remember to include items such as
- Conversion costs (export as well as import)
- Customisation / configuration costs
- Training costs
23Evaluation Phases
- Phase 1
- Assessment of compliance and evaluation against
evaluation criteria - Phase 2
- Discussions, clarification, negotiations and
reference checks with short-listed Suppliers.
Update evaluation. - Phase 3
- Finalise contract with preferred supplier,
including further discussions and negotiations as
appropriate
Short-listed Suppliers
Preferred Supplier
Signed Contract
24Evaluating Proposals
Evaluation Methodology
Evaluation Criteria
Weightings
Scoring Rules
Evaluating Price
25Evaluation Criteria Weightings (excl. Price)
26Phase 1 Evaluation Results
- Business Requirements
- Implementation Plan
- Ongoing Services
- Commercial
- Price
27Business Requirements Comparison-1
28Business Requirements Comparison-2
29Implementation Plan Comparison
30Ongoing Services Comparison
31Commercial Comparison
32Phase 1 Summary (excl Price)
33Price per Point of Value Approach
- Lowest price per point of value score highest
ranked supplier - The service providers response must meet
Riverviews minimum requirements on each of the
non-price evaluation criteria
Price per Point of Value Score
NPV for Supplier
Weighted Score for Supplier
34Financial Comparison - 1
35Financial Comparison - 2
36Narrowing the field
- Vendor presentations
- We drove the agenda, not the vendor
- Important to use real-life scenarios / scripts
- Level playing field for all presentations
- No second chance
- Reference site checking
- Vendor recommendations
- Plus our own enquiries
37Selection and Contract
- From two down to one
- Keep 1 and 2 keen right to the very end
- Contracts
- Dont simply accept the standard contract
- Make the extra effort to ensure the contract
matches your needs - Always make sure your school legal advisers
review the contract
38Conversion and trial
- If converting data from old system to new system
- Do your best to retain support from outgoing
vendor. - Allocate plenty of time and resources to test the
converted data. - Worth considering at least two iterations of the
conversion-and-trial cycle. - Ensure robust change request procedure is in
place during this phase.
39Go live!
- November 2004 Conversion--Trial 1
- January 2005 Conversion--Trial 2
- March 2005 Go Live!
- Train! Train! Train!
- Support! Support! Support!
40Post implementation
- March 2005 was chosen for implementation as it
had the least impact on our daily business. - By Term 2, we were ready to use the new system
for the second billing run. - Weve now been working with the new system for
over one year. - Every month / term that goes by things get
easier, smoother, more second-nature. - The old system is still available for reference,
which is helping to mop up inconsistencies. - We have also been building communication channels
with other schools using the system, which is
helping to inform the vendor of future
improvements.
41Other Project Applications
- At Riverview, we have been using essentially the
same methodology for about three years, for
projects such as - Internet Service Provision
- Storage solution (SAN/DDT)
- Reprographics refresh
- Integrated Library Management System
42Useful links
- There is an increasing requirement for IT Project
Managers to have formal accreditation - AIPM Australian Institute of Project Management
- www.aipm.com.au
- Endorsed courses
- www.aipm.com.au/html/aipm_endorsed_courses_act_nsw
.cfm - Sydney University Project Management Graduate
Programme (PMGP) - www.pmgp.usyd.edu.au
- PRINCE2
- http//www.ogc.gov.uk/prince2/
43In Conclusion
- Good ICT projects must be informed by robust
research and well-exercised methodology - Good ICT projects must be continuously evaluated
and reviewed - Good ICT projects lead to improved organisational
agility and effectiveness.
44Contact Details
- Dr Christopher OMahony
- Head Centre for Information Technology
- Saint Ignatius College, Riverview
- Tambourine Bay Road, Riverview, NSW 2066
- Phone (02) 9882 8222 Fax (02) 9882 8588
- Web www.riverview.nsw.edu.au Email
cdomahony_at_riverview.nsw.edu.au