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• SCOPE
• TIME
• RESOURCES
Project Vs Program
The terms of project and programs are often used synonymously, but in practice the two terms are
different. The major difference lie in scale and time span.
∞ A program is “a group of related projects designed to accomplish a common goal over an extended
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period of time.
∞ Example:
Project: completion of a required course in project management.
Program: completion of all courses required for a business major.
∞ With in a program, they could be many interrelated projects unless the program has standalone
program.
∞ Therefore, the activity of program is grater or equal to the activity of project.
∞ A program manager provides leadership and direction for the project managers heading the projects
within the program.
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Project Vs Program
Project and every day activities are not the same
Project Operation
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successful in executing temporary projects.
∞ ‘Mistakenly thought’ technical skill is the only that the project manager must
posses.
∞ But, Project managers are generalists with many skills in their repertoires.
∞ Due to the Project characteristics, project manager must posses the skills beyond
operational managers.
∞ Project manager skill = Operational management skill + Project management skill
Project Management
Operation Management Skills:
∞ Successful project manager must posses all the skills needed by operations managers of
organizations. These skills include:
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* Good communication * Team building
* Planning * Expediting
* Motivating * Political sensitivity
Project Management Skills
Because project managers generally operate in a project environment that is more time sensitive
and goal driven, the successful project manager requires additional knowledge, skills, and
abilities.
^Credibility ^Creativity as a problem solver
^Tolerance for ambiguity ^Flexibility in management style
^Effectiveness in communicating
• The potential benefits from project management are:
Identification of functional responsibilities to ensure that all activities are
accounted for, regardless of personnel turnover
Minimizing the need for continuous reporting
Identification of time limits for scheduling
Identification of a methodology for trade-off analysis
Measurement of accomplishment against plans
Early identification of problems so that corrective action may follow
Improved estimating capability for future planning
Knowing when objectives cannot be met or will be exceeded
Project Stakeholders Management
∞ Stakeholders are the people involved in or affected by project activities.
For example, there are several stakeholders involved in a home construction
Custo
project. mer or
Gov’t User
Contac
bodies tor
Project
Stakehold Workers
Opponen er ,
ts electrici
an
Supplie Suppor
rs t staff
∞ They are the people who are actively involved with the work of the project or have
something to either gain or lose as a result of the project.
∞ Successful project managers develop good relationships with project stakeholders to
understand and meet their needs and expectations
Stakeholders of a project
Internal project stakeholders
Project sponsor
Project team
Support staff
Internal customers for the project
Top management
Other functional managers, and
Other project managers
External project stakeholders
Project’s customers (if they are external to the organization)
Competitors
Suppliers
Other external groups that are potentially involved in the project or affected by
it, such as government officials and concerned citizens.
Importance of Project Stakeholder Management
• Because stakeholder management is so important to project success.
• The purpose of project stakeholder management:
1. To identify all people or organizations affected by a project
2. To analyze stakeholder expectations, and to effectively engage
stakeholders
Changing the way work is done can send a shock wave through an
organization, leaving many people afraid and even thinking about ways to stop
or sabotage a project
Importance of Project Stakeholder Management
• Projects often cause changes in organizations, and some people may
lose their jobs when a project is completed
• Project managers might be viewed as enemies
• By contrast, they could be viewed as allies if they lead a project that helps
increase profits, produce new jobs, or increase pay for certain stakeholders
• In any case, project managers must learn to identify, understand, and
work with a variety of stakeholders
Project knowledge Area
Integration management
Scope management
Time management
Cost management
Quality management
HRM management
Communication management
Risk management
Procurement management
Project Parameter
∞ Every project is constrained in different ways. Some project managers focus
on scope, time, and cost constraints.
These limitations are sometimes referred to in project management as the
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triple constraint.
Scope: What work will be done as part of the project? What unique
Understand the product, service, or result does the customer or sponsor expect from the
constraint of
projects.
project?
Time: How long should it take to complete the project? What is the
project’s schedule?
Cost: What should it cost to complete the project? What is the project’s
budget? What resources are needed?
∞ To create a successful project, project managers must consider scope, time,
and cost and balance these three often-competing goals.
Project Parameter
∞ Other people focus on the quadruple constraint, which adds quality as a
fourth constraint.
Quality: How good does the quality of the products or services need to be? What do we
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need to do to satisfy the customer?
∞ PMBOK also adds a resources and risk as a constraint , but states that there may be
others as well, depending on the project.
Understand the
constraint of ∞ The triple constraint goals—scope, time, and cost—often have a specific target at
projects.
the beginning of the project.
For example, a couple might initially plan to move into their new 2,000 square foot
home in six months and spend $300,000 on the entire project.
∞ The couple will have to make many decisions along the way that may affect
meeting those goals.
They might need to increase the budget to meet scope and time goals
Or decrease the scope to meet time and budget goals
Project Parameter
∞ The other three constraints – quality, resource and risk are often affect each
other as well as the scope, time, and cost goals of a project.
∞ These constraints are an interdependent set. Change in one can cause a
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change in another constraint to restore the equilibrium of the project.
∞ Therefore, Project performance is a function of scope, time, cost, quality
Understand the
resource and risk.
constraint of
projects. Performance = f (S, T, C, Q, R, r)
∞ What will be scope and cost, if the product time/duration is reduced?
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Project Success Vs failures
How do you define the success or failure of a project?
There are a few common criteria for measuring project success as applied to
the example project of building a new 2,000 square foot home within six
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months for $300,000:
Understood We can define the project was success alternatively,
reason the
for project 1. The project was met scope, time and cost goals.
success and
failure If the home was 2,000 square feet and met other scope requirements, was
completed in six months, and cost $300,000, we could call it a successful
project based on these criteria.
2. The project satisfied the customer/sponsor.
Many organizations implement a customer satisfaction rating system for
projects to measure project success
Successful project management can then be defined as having achieved the project
objectives:
1. Within time
2. Within cost
3. At the desired performance/technology level
4. While utilizing the assigned resources effectively and efficiently
5. Accepted by the customer
DEFINING PROJECT SUCCESS
Project success is a completion of an activity within the constraints of time, cost, and
performance.
This was the definition used for the past twenty years or so.
Today, the definition of project success has been modified to include completion:
Within the allocated time period
Within the budgeted cost
At the proper performance or specification level
With acceptance by the customer/user
With minimum or mutually agreed upon scope changes
Without disturbing the main work flow of the organization
Without changing the corporate culture
Project Success Vs failures
Reason for failure
Reason for Success
∞ Inadequate project planning Sound project planning and
(budget, schedule, scope) management processes
Understood
reason the ∞ Lack of executive commitment. Project tied to the organization’s
for project
∞ Lack of linkage to the business business goals
success and
failure strategy Senior management commitment
∞ Wrong team members Realistic schedule
∞ No measures for evaluating the Good stakeholder relationships
success of the project Skilled and appropriate team
∞ Inability to manage change members with defined roles and
(inflexibility) responsibilities
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Unfortunately, the benefits cannot be achieved without overcoming
obstacles such as:
● Project complexity
● Customer’s special requirements and scope changes
● Organizational restructuring
● Project risks
● Changes in technology
● Forward planning and pricing
Project Cycle
Identification
Evaluation
Preparation/Formulation
Implementation
Appraisal/ Selection
Financing
1. IDENTIFICATION
• First stage in the cycle – it is searching for and identifying potential/ feasible projects ideas.
• Most projects start as an elementary idea.
Resource-based project ideas – opportunity to make profitable use of available resources.
Market-based project ideas – arising from identified demand in home or overseas markets.
Need-based project ideas –to fulfill certain basic material requirements and services
(unsatisfied needs).
Technical specialists may identify areas with technical deficiencies
Local leaders- may provide information about existing problems and bottlenecks. Proposals
to extend and/or expand existing programs/projects.
2. PREPARATION /FORMULATION … PROJECT DESIGN
A progressively detailed preparation and analysis of the aspects of a project follows
identification.
The project seriously considered as a definite investment action at this stage.
Involves pre-feasibility and feasibility studies. Covers the establishment of:- commercial,
technical, institutional, financial, and socio- economic feasibility.
Decisions made on the:
scope of the project,
location and site,
soil and hydrological requirements,
project size( farm or factory size) etc .
Resource base investigations undertaken and alternative forms of projects are explored.
• Outcomes: distinct proposal(s) in terms of technical specifications, financial and
economic costs and benefits, institutional and managerial aspects etc
3. APPRAISAL AND SELECTION
Pre-
Operating investment
phase phase
Investment
phase
1. THE PRE––INVESTMENT PHASE
This phase also comprises several stages:
Identification of investment opportunities (opportunity studies);
Analysis of project alternatives and preliminary project selection,
Project preparation (pre-feasibility and feasibility studies);
Project appraisal, selection, and investment decision
Support or functional studies are also part of the project preparation stage and are
usually conducted separately, for later incorporation of the findings in a pre-
feasibility study or feasibility study as appropriate
The division of the pre-investment phase into stages:
1. OPPORTUNITY STUDIES
Identification of investment opportunities is the starting point in a series of investment related
activities.
Provides information on available investment opportunities.
Purposes:
highlight the principal investment aspects of a possible industrial proposition.
arrive at a quick and inexpensive determination of salient facts of an investment possibility.
The opportunity study should analyze:
Natural resources
The existing agricultural base (for agro-industries),
Future demand for consumer goods,
Imports substitution and export possibilities,
Environmental impacts (mandatory or non-revenue producing projects),
Expansions of existing capacity,
Manufacturing sector (benchmarking from other countries), & Diversification, etc.
2. PRE--FEASIBILITY STUDIES
The project idea elaborated in a more detailed study.
• A feasibility study is a costly and time-consuming task
Pre-feasibility study helps to see if:
All possible project alternatives are examined,
The project concept justifies detailed study,
All aspects are critical and need in-depth investigation, &
The project idea is viable and attractive or not
3. SUPPORT /FUNCTIONAL/ STUDIES
• Required as prerequisites for or in support of prefeasibility and feasibility
studies particularly for large-scale investment proposals
• Functional studies include:
Market studies of products,
Raw material and factory supplies studies,
Laboratory and pilot plant tests,
Location studies, Environmental impact assessment,
Economies of scale studies, and
Equipment selection studies.
D. FEASIBILITY STUDIES
It should provide all data necessary for an investment decision.
Commercial, technical, financial, economic, and, environment prerequisites for
an investment project should be defined, refined, and critically examined.
5. APPRAISAL REPORT
Various parties will carry out their own appraisal of the investment project in
accordance with their individual:
Objectives: Evaluation of expected risks, costs, and gains
2. The Investment/Implementation Phase
This phase provides wide scope for consultancy and engineering work-primarily in the field
of project management.
Comprises the following stages:
Establishing the legal, financial, and organizational framework;
Tendering, evaluation of bids, and negotiations;
Technology acquisition and transfer;
Detailed engineering design and contract, including tendering, evaluation of bids, and
negotiations;
Acquisition of land, construction work, and installation
Pre-production marketing, including the securing of supplies and suppliers and setting up
the administration of the firm;
Recruitment and training of personnel; and
Plant commissioning and start-up
3. THE OPERATING PHASE
• ... Problems arising
Short term view– relates to the initial, after commencement of production period
problems.
Problems associated with the application of production techniques, operation of
equipment, or inadequate labor productivity owing to lack of qualified staff and
labor.
Their origin is in the implementation phase – relatively easy to overcome due to
learning over time.
Long-term view –problems that relates to chosen strategies and the associated
production and marketing costs as well as sales revenues.
These have direct relationships with the projections made at the pre-investment
phase.
If such strategies and projections prove faulty, any remedial measures if not made
there it will become, not only be difficult but, may prove highly expensive.
European commission project life cycle
1. Programming
2. Identification
3. Appraisal
4. Financing
5. Implementation
6. Evaluation
1. Project Cycle In Ethiopia Developed By DEPSA’s in 1990
Generally, project cycle in Ethiopia consists of 6 phases which can be
described as:
1. Identification,
2. Feasibility
3. Appraisal/ Funding Negotiation/Budget Allocation,
4. Implementation,
5. Ex-post Evaluation/Implementation Completion Report, and
6. Operation.
Consequences of not using PMT
DELAY
COST
WASTE OF RESOURCES
QUALITY
DISSATISFACTION
REPUTATION
Types of Projects
1. Manufacturing Projects:
Where the final result is a vehicle, ship, aircraft, a piece of machinery etc.
2. Construction Projects:
• Resulting in the erection of buildings, bridges, roads, tunnels etc. Mining and
petro-chemical projects can be included in this group.
3. Management Projects:
• Which include the organization or reorganization of work without necessarily
producing a tangible result.
4. Research Projects:
• In which the objectives may be difficult to establish, and where the results are
unpredictable.
Project Management….