PMMT Additional Notes: Project Management Unit 28 October 2011
PMMT Additional Notes: Project Management Unit 28 October 2011
PMMT Additional Notes: Project Management Unit 28 October 2011
Learning Objectives
Describe an overall framework for project integration management as it relates to the other project management knowledge areas and the project life cycle. Explain the strategic planning process and apply different project selection methods. Explain the importance of creating a project charter to formally initiate projects. Discuss the process of creating a preliminary project scope statement.
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Learning Objectives
Describe project management plan development, including content, using guidelines and templates for developing plans, and performing a stakeholder analysis to help manage relationships. Explain project execution, its relationship to project planning, the factors related to successful results, and tools and techniques to assist in project execution. Describe the process of monitoring and controlling project work.
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Learning Objectives
Understand the integrated change control process, planning for and managing changes on information technology projects, and developing and using a change control system. Explain the importance of developing and following good procedures for closing projects. Describe how software can assist in project integration management.
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Categorizing IT Projects
One categorization assesses whether the project provides a response to:
A problem An opportunity A directive
Another categorization is based on the time it will take to complete a project or the date by which it must be done. Another categorization is the overall priority of the project.
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Note that totals are equal, but NPVs are not because of the time value of money.
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NPV Calculations
Determine estimated costs and benefits for the life of the project and the products it produces. Determine the discount rate (check with your organisation on what to use). Calculate the NPV (see text for details). Some organisations consider the investment year as year 0, while others consider it year 1. Some people enter costs as negative numbers, while others do not. Make sure to identify your organisation s preferences.
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Return on Investment
Return on investment (ROI) is calculated by subtracting the project costs from the benefits and then dividing by the costs.
ROI = (total discounted benefits - total discounted costs) / discounted costs
The higher the ROI, the better. Many organisations have a required rate of return or minimum acceptable rate of return on investment for projects. Internal rate of return (IRR) can by calculated by setting the NPV to zero.
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Payback Analysis
Another important financial consideration is payback analysis. The payback period is the amount of time it will take to recoup, in the form of net cash inflows, the total dollars invested in a project. Payback occurs when the cumulative discounted benefits and costs are greater than zero. Many organisations want IT projects to have a fairly short payback period.
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Excel file
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Project Charters
After deciding what project to work on, it is important to let the rest of the organisation know. A project charter is a document that formally recognizes the existence of a project and provides direction on the project s objectives and management. Key project stakeholders should sign a project charter to acknowledge agreement on the need and intent of the project; a signed charter is a key output of project integration management.
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A good practice is to develop a preliminary or initial scope statement during project initiation and a more detailed scope statement as the project progresses.
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Plans should first and foremost guide project execution by helping the project manager lead the project team and assess project status.
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Table 4-1. Sample Contents for a Software Project Management Plan (SPMP)
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Stakeholder Analysis
A stakeholder analysis documents important (often sensitive) information about stakeholders such as:
Stakeholders names and organisations. Their roles on the project. Unique facts about each stakeholder. Their level of influence on and interest in the project. Suggestions for managing relationships with each stakeholder.
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Project Execution
Project execution involves managing and performing the work described in the project management plan. The majority of time and money is usually spent on execution. The application area of the project directly affects project execution because the products of the project are produced during project execution.
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Project managers may still need to break the rules to meet project goals, and senior managers must support those actions.
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Media Snapshot
The 2002 Olympic Winter Games and Paralympics took five years to plan and cost more than $1.9 billion. PMI awarded the Salt Lake Organizing Committee (SLOC) the Project of the Year award for delivering world-class games. Four years before the Games began, the SLOC used a Primavera softwarebased system with a cascading color-coded WBS to integrate planningThe SLOC also used an Executive Roadmap, a one-page list of the top 100 Gameswide activities, to keep executives apprised of progress. Activities were tied to detailed project information within each department s schedule. A 90-day highlighter showed which managers were accountable for each integrated activity. Fraser Bullock, SLOC Chief Operating Officer and Chief, said, We knew when we were on and off schedule and where we had to apply additional resources. The interrelation of the functions meant they could not run in isolationit was a smoothly running machine. *
*Foti, Ross, The Best Winter Olympics, Period, PM Network (January 2004), p. 23.
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Configuration Management
Ensures that the descriptions of the project s products are correct and complete. Involves identifying and controlling the functional and physical design characteristics of products and their support documentation. Configuration management specialists identify and document configuration requirements, control changes, record and report changes, and audit the products to verify conformance to requirements.
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Closing Projects
To close a project, you must finalize all activities and transfer the completed or cancelled work to the appropriate people. Main outputs include:
Administrative closure procedures. Contract closure procedures. Final products, services, or results. organisational process asset updates.
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Chapter Summary
Project integration management includes:
Developing a project charter. Developing a preliminary project scope statement. Developing a project management plan. Directing and managing project execution. Monitoring and controlling project work. Performing integrated change control. Closing the project.
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Learning Objectives
Understand the elements that make good project scope management important. Explain the scope planning process and describe the contents of a scope management plan. Describe the process for developing a project scope statement using the project charter and preliminary scope statement. Discuss the scope definition process and work involved in constructing a work breakdown structure using the analogy, top-down, bottom-up, and mind-mapping approaches.
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Learning Objectives
Explain the importance of scope verification and how it relates to scope definition and control. Understand the importance of scope control and approaches for preventing scope-related problems on information technology projects. Describe how software can assist in project scope management.
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Media Snapshot
Many people enjoy watching television shows like Changing Rooms or Trading Spaces, where participants have two days and $1,000 to update a room in their neighbor s house. Because the time and cost are set, it s the scope that has the most flexibility. Designers on these shows often have to change initial scope goals due to budget or time constraints. Although most homeowners are very happy with work done on the show, some are obviously disappointed. Unlike most projects where the project team works closely with the customer, homeowners have little say in what gets done and cannot inspect the work along the wayWhat happens when the homeowners don t like the work that s been done? The FAQ section of tlc.com says, Everyone on our show is told upfront that there s a chance they won t like the final design of the room. Each applicant signs a release acknowledging that the show is not responsible for redecorating a room that isn t to the owner s taste. Too bad you can t get sponsors for most projects to sign a similar release form. It would make project scope management much easier!
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Project 98 file
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Figure 5-4. Intranet Gantt Chart Organized by Project Management Process Groups
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*Cleland, David I., Project Management: Strategic Design and Implementation, 2nd edition (New York: McGraw-Hill 1994).
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*Cleland, David I., Project Management: Strategic Design and Implementation, 2nd edition (New York: McGraw-Hill 1994).
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Scope Verification
It is very difficult to create a good scope statement and WBS for a project. It is even more difficult to verify project scope and minimize scope changes. Many IT projects suffer from scope creep and poor scope verification (see What Went Wrong? ).
FoxMeyer Drug filed for bankruptcy after scope creep on a robotic warehouse. Engineers at Grumman called a system Naziware and refused to use it. 21st Century Insurance Group wasted a lot of time and money on a project that could have used off-the-shelf components.
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Scope Control
Scope control involves controlling changes to the project scope. Goals of scope control are to:
Influence the factors that cause scope changes. Ensure changes are processed according to procedures developed as part of integrated change control. Manage changes when they occur.
Chapter Summary
Project scope management includes the processes required to ensure that the project addresses all the work requiredand only the work requiredto complete the project successfully. Main processes include:
Scope planning Scope definition WBS creation Scope verification Scope control
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