Cliant User Liaison
Cliant User Liaison
Cliant User Liaison
An organization is a social unit of people that is structured and managed to meet a need or
to pursue collective goals.
All organizations have a management structure that determines relationships between the
different activities and the members, and subdivides and assigns roles, responsibilities,
and authority to carry out different tasks. Organizations are open systems--they affect and
are affected by their environment.
Organization is a broader term, as it includes businesses and other groups of people not
organized for commercial purposes.
These businesses often raise money and utilize other resources to provide or support
public programs. Business organization is to focus on each word separately.
Organizations have a specific structure and hierarchy. People and systems create a culture
within the organization and guide its operation. Different organizations have different
policies, work flows and objectives.
In this context we can divide all business processes into three categories:
A stakeholder is any person, organization, social group, or society at large that has a
stake in the business.
Stakeholders can be internal to the organization or external. In many projects the public at
large will become a stakeholder to be considered during the project. The challenge for the
project manager when the public is a stakeholder will be to act while considering public
needs.
A project manager must be sure to identify and list all potential stakeholders for a project.
Potential stakeholders include but are not limited to: Competitors National communities
Employees Professional associations Government Prospective customers Government
regulatory agencies Prospective employees Industry trade groups Public at large (Global
community) Investors Shareholders Labor unions Suppliers Local communities
The project manager must document relevant information for all identified stakeholders.
This information may include the stakeholder’s interests, involvement, expectations,
importance, influence, and impact on the project’s execution as well as any specific
communications requirements.
It is important to note that although some identified stakeholders may not actually require
any communications, those stakeholders should be identified.
When identifying stakeholders and rating their level of interest and involvement in the
project, it will become important to use some sort of a tool — a rating scale, an influence
diagram, or a chart form to identify the level of power, influence, interest, or impact that
the stakeholder may have on the project.
• Project Charter High-level document that authorizes the project and assigns/authorizes
the project manager’
• Expert Judgment ,Expert technical and/or managerial judgment (from any qualified
source)
In order to rate each stakeholder’s importance and impact on the project you need some
form of stakeholder analysis. Stakeholder analysis focuses on the stakeholder’s
importance to the project, and to the organization, the influence exerted by the
stakeholder, plus stakeholder participation and expectations.
The following is a list of some of the common tasks associated with the Identify
Stakeholders process:
Primary stakeholders are the people or groups that stand to be directly affected,
either positively or negatively, by an effort or the actions of an agency, institution,
or organization
Secondary stakeholders are people or groups that are indirectly affected, either
positively or negatively, by an effort or the actions of an agency, institution, or
organization
Key stakeholders, who might belong to either or neither of the first two groups, are
those who can have a positive or negative effect on an effort, or who are important
within or to an organization, agency, or institution engaged in an effort.
Stakeholders’ interests can be many and varied. A few of the more common:
Economics. An employment training program might improve economic prospects
for low-income people, for example. Zoning regulations may also have economic
consequences for various groups.
Social change. An effort to improve racial harmony could alter the social climate
for members of both the racial or ethnic minority and the majority.
Work. Involving workers in decision-making can enhance work life and make
people more satisfied with their jobs.
Time. Flexible work hours, relief programs for caregivers, parental leave, and other
efforts that provide people with time for leisure or taking care of the business of life
can relieve stress and increase productivity.
Environment. Protection of open space, conservation of resources, attention to
climate change, and other environmental efforts can add to everyday life. These
can also be seen as harmful to business and private ownership.
Physical health. Free or sliding-scale medical facilities and other similar programs
provide a clear benefit for low-income people and can improve community health.
Safety and security. Neighborhood watch or patrol programs, better policing in
high-crime neighborhoods, work safety initiatives – all of these and many other
efforts can improve safety for specific populations or for the community as a whole.
Mental health. Community mental health centers and adult day care can be
extremely important not only to people with mental health issues, but also to their
families and to the community as a whole.
Brainstorm. Get together with people in your organization, officials, and others
already involved in or informed about the effort and start calling out categories and
names.
Collect categories and names from informants in the community
Consult with organizations.
Get more ideas from stakeholders as you identify them.
If appropriate, advertise.
STAKEHOLDER ANALYSIS/STAKEHOLDER MAPPING
Stakeholder analysis (stakeholder mapping) is a way of determining who among
stakeholders can have the most positive or negative influence on an effort, who is likely to
be most affected by the effort, and how you should work with stakeholders with different
levels of interest and influence.
Most methods of stakeholder analysis or mapping divide stakeholders into one of four
groups, each occupying one space in a four-space grid:
STAKEHOLDER MANAGEMENT
Stakeholder analysis is only useful if it’s used. Stakeholder management is where analysis
and practice meet. It allows you to use the analysis to help gain support and buy-in for
your effort
EVALUATION OF THE STAKEHOLDER PROCESS
Here are some evaluation questions you might consider:
The answers to these and similar questions could both help you improve the current effort
and make a big difference the next time – and there will be a next time – you involve
stakeholders.
1.3Identifying organizational structure, culture and politics
Organizational structure
Organizational structure is a system used to define a hierarchy within an organization. It
identifies each job, its function and where it reports to within the organization. This
structure is developed to establish how an organization operates and assists an
organization in obtaining its goals to allow for future growth. The structure is illustrated
using an organizational chart.
Organizational structure is
typically hierarchical arrangement of lines of authority, communications, rights and duties
of an organization.
Organizational structure determines how
the roles, power and responsibilities are assigned, controlled, and coordinated, and
how information flows between the different levels of management.
An organizational structure defines how activities such as task allocation, coordination
and supervision are directed towards the achievement of organizational aims. It can also
be considered as the viewing glass or perspective through which individuals see their
organization and its environment.
Organizational structure allows the expressed allocation of responsibilities for different
functions and processes to different entities such as
the branch, department, workgroup and individual.
Organizational structure affects organizational action in two big ways :
1. It provides the foundation on which standard operating procedures and routines rest.
2. It determines which individuals get to participate in which decision-making processes,
and thus to what extent their views shape the organization’s actions.
Organizational structures can take many forms. These are influenced by factors such as its
purpose, size, the complexity of the tasks it performs, the external environment and its
culture. Its products, services or where it is located also determine which structure is best.
organizational culture
An organizational culture reflects the shared values within the organization that impact
employee morale, communication and, ultimately, success. Companies use formal
processes and activities to influence culture, such as social activities to promote
teamwork. However, much of an organization's unique culture evolves through informal
channels. For example, a company's culture can be affected by the way employees
communicate during lunch, breaks and other informal encounters.
Organizational politics
The pursuit of individual agendas and self-interest in an organization without regard to
their effect on the organization's efforts to achieve its goals.
Organizational politics is itself similar to a game, one that requires an assumption of risks
just like any contact sport. "It must be played with diligence and a full understanding of
the landscape, players and rules."
Organizational politics can be a nasty business where people promote their own self-
interests at the expense of company goals. It can also be secretive, and it can cause us to
doubt the intentions of other people.
1.4 Analyzing existing organizations’ information technology
Information technology systems are used by organizations to perform various tasks. Some
use IT to provide for the basic processing of transactions, while others enable customers,
distributors and suppliers to interact with the organization through various communication
technology systems such as the internet.
The term ‘’information technology systems in an organization ‘’ is composed of four
distinct parts which include: an organization, information in an organization, and
information technology and information technology systems in an organization.
Below I have listed some of the impacts of information technology in an organization.
Flow of Information: What information describes might be internal, external, objective
or subjective. External information describes the environment surrounding the
organization. Objective information describes something that is known. Subjective
information describes something that is currently unknown.
Transaction processing(TPS): is a system that processes transactions that occur
within an organization. TPS will update any transaction process and store that
information in a database
Decision support(DDS): is designed to support decision making when the problem is
not structured.
Workgroup support: creating an information sharing environment, workers can easily
consult each other across different department without any interruption.
Executive support: An executive information system (EIS) allows managers to view
information from different angles.
Data Management: An organization stores all its relevant data on a database.
Communication: Communication is a great tool in business develops, with advanced
communication tools, employees and managers can easily make beneficial decisions in the
organization.
LO.2 Develop support procedures
2.1Procedures and techniques in determining the level of support for the
organization/business
This element covers the development of support procedures for the new system you have
implemented in an organization. In the first element Confirm Requirements, you
determined what technology needs to be supported, identified the key stakeholders, the
organisation's structure and culture and the level of support they require. You are now
ready to develop the procedures for providing this support and document all of this in an
agreement with the customer.
1 Confirm Requirements
This element covers material relevant to the support of existing Information Technology
Systems in a business environment.
Often when you have helped a business implement a new system, you will also be asked
to help support the system. This competency will help you develop a systematic approach
to identifying the technology to be supported, negotiating an agreement, developing
support procedures and providing quality support in accordance with your agreement.
You should contact the organisation and check that you have got everything - i.e. that you
have listed all the hardware and software that needs support and that all of the key
stakeholders have had input into your list.
Verification is a quality assurance technique. You will not only do it before you draft the
agreement, but after as well. If you are thorough with your consultation, you will be less
likely to miss things.
3 Establish Procedures
Incident Management (for help desk) is actually the best way of answering this
question.Typical Incident Management involves the following steps:
In the diagram, the user contacts the help desk or other support position. The help desk
receives the call or contact, prescreens and authenticates it. Prescreening and
authentication mean establishing that the call is a genuine problem from a person that is
eligible to receive support. It also involves giving advice about problems that are currently
affecting all users (server outages for example).
In addition, we need to know the answers to the following in order to establish the overall
support procedures:
1. What is the primary method of contact? (eg phone, email, fax, web)
2. When and by whom will the procedures be reviewed?
3. What performance targets are set by the procedures? (eg respond to priority 1
requests within 1 hour)
4. What reports should be generated by the support function?
5. How will the support function be reviewed and improved?
When you have answered all of these questions, you have basically written your
procedures. All that is left to do is to put them into a standard format.
These documented procedures can then be used as part of the agreement with your client.
An agreement has traditionally been called a contract. However, as delivering I.T. Support
is a service and a business expense that Managers often want to monitor and measure, it
has become popular to use a SERVICE LEVEL AGREEMENT to document the type and
level of support, the procedures and targets that must be used and achieved.
A service-level Agreement is an agreement between two or more parties, where one is the
customer and the others are service providers. This can be a legally binding formal or an
informal "contract" (for example, internal department relationships.
Service level agreements are also defined at different levels:
Service-level SLA
Availability and uptime -- the percentage of the time services will be available
The number of concurrent users that can be served
Specific performance benchmarks to which actual performance will be periodically
compared
Application response time
The schedule for notification in advance of network changes that may affect users
Help desk response time for various classes of problems
Usage statistics that will be provided.
Term used to describe reaching out to or being in touch with another person, business or
entity. For example, a salesperson may contact another person or business for a
potential sale.
C OM B IN IN G D IF F ER E NT M ET HO DS
At this point, we have good news (we hope). It is possible to combine these different
methods of contact together. For instance, you can...
And, to expand the point, you can add a third stage as well. That is, you can call after you
have sent a letter, or write after you have met. In other words,
Identifying Milestone
A milestone is an objective or major event that often requires many smaller tasks to be
completed before it can be deemed complete. It is a large outcome that encompasses all
the work that went into it.
A milestone is a significant event in your life. Often a milestone marks the start of a new
chapter. For example, the day you graduated from high school was a milestone in your
life.
Milestone literally refers to a roadside marker that lists the distance to a particular
location. These days, the word is more often used figuratively to refer to significant events
in life, like graduating from college or getting married. It acts sort of like the road sign: it's
often a moment when you reflect on where you stand in life. A milestone can also be a
nonpersonal event that results in a big change, such as a milestone victory or a company's
sales milestone.
Project's Milestone
A Milestone is a reference point that marks a major event in a project and is used to
monitor the project's progress. The milestones for a project should present a clear
sequence of events that will incrementally build up to the completion of the approved
project.
A milestone is an objective or major event that often requires many smaller tasks to be
completed before it can be deemed complete. It is a large outcome that encompasses all
the work that went into it. Tasks would be the smaller, though no less important things
that you completed in order to make that milestone happen.
Types of Feedback
Effective
Goal is to get student to internalize the effective feedback to use the suggested
strategies independently on future work.
Feedback that is intended to be used by the learner to independently move their
reasoning to the next level.
Criteria-based phrases are used to describe the strengths and weaknesses of the
learner’s work.
Limits feedback to one or two traits/aspect of quality at a time.
Students should have an opportunity to “redo” their work based on the effective
feedback.
“I agree with the pattern that you have identified in the table. I am not convinced
that the rule you wrote works for all the values in the table. How could you prove
this?”
Descriptive
Goal is to improve student achievement by telling the learner how to move forward
in the learning process.
Feedback that is intended to tell the learner what needs to be improved.
Feedback isn’t as effective in getting students to move forward in the learning
process.
“You accurately found the number of students in 4th grade who said chocolate ice-
cream was their favorite. You now need to divide this number by the total number
of students to get the percent who said chocolate ice-cream was their favorite.”
Evaluative
Compiled by F.W