Title: Effective Project Management
1Effective Project Management
- CST 332/407
- Roosevelt University
- Roger Clery
2Chapter 1 What Is a Project?
3 What is a Project?
A project is a sequence of unique, complex, and
connected activities having one goal or purpose
and that must be completed by a specific time,
within budget, and according to specifications.
4 Project Management Criteria
- Projects are oriented towards a goal.
- There is something unique about every project.
- Projects have a finite duration.
- Projects require coordination of interrelated
activities.
5Project Characteristics
- Defined goal
- Primary sponsor or customer
- Set of activities
- Unique, complex, sequenced
- Start finish
- Temporary, time frame for completion
- Limited resources
- Dollars, people
- Uncertainty, risk
6Defining a Project
- Sequence of Activities
- Complex Activities
- Connected Activities
- One Goal
- Specified Time
- Within Budget
- According to Specification
7 What is Project Management?
- Project management is a set of principles and
tools for - Defining
- Planning
- Executing
- Controlling . . . and
- Completing a PROJECT
8What is Project Management?
- PM is the application of knowledge, skills, tools
and techniques to project activities in order to
meet project requirements. (PMI) - PM
- is an art.
- is a science.
- has a set of tools and methods.
9Three Disciplines
10What Is a Program?
- A collection of projects
- NASA
11Ongoing Activities
- Have opposite characteristics to projects
- Similar, often identical products or services
- No defined end
- Staffing management practices geared to above
12Project Parameters
- Scope
- Quality
- Cost
- Time
- Resources
13The Scope Triangle
- Scope Creep
- Hope Creep
- Effort Creep
- Feature Creep
14Project DynamicsThe Triple Constraints
Scope Quality
Cost
Time
Resources
15Scope Creep (Wysocki)
- Scope creep
- any change not in original plan
- IT particularly prone to creep
- major challenge for PMs
- Hope creep
- will catch up next week
- Effort creep
- 95-99 complete but never 100
- Feature creep
- team member adds features
16Project Classifications
17Classification by Project Characteristics
- Risk
- Business Value
- Length
- Complexity
- Technology
- Number of Departments
- Cost
18Classification by Project Type
- Software
- Hardware
- Recruiting hiring
19Traditional Project Management
- PM practiced (not by name) for millennia
- PERT/CPM tools developed in 1950s
- Focus on time, budget, specs
- Gantt charts, Pert/CPM
- s-shaped budget curves
- resource matrices
- Customers an afterthought
- Project managers domain limited
- implementers
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21Why is this, Project Management, more difficult
today?
22Change
- Business Change
- Projects
- Project Management (PM)
23New Business Environment
- Change at ever faster pace
- Globalization/Internet
- Intense Competition
- BPR leading to
- Downsizing, flattening
- Team approach, empowerment
- E-Commerce, outsourcing
24New Project Management
- Need to enhance traditional PM to
- become more customer focused
- utilize new tools softer skills
- empower/select project managers
- decision making
- profit-loss responsibilities
- entrepreneurial approach
- business know-how
25Building Bridges versus Software
- Why do bridge projects usually succeed?
- Why do software projects usually fail?
- on time
- within budget
- meet expectations
Discussion
26 Chapter 2 What Is Traditional Project
Management?
27Principles of Traditional Project Management
- Defining
- Planning
- Executing
- Controlling
- Closing
28Traditional Project Management Life Cycle
- Defining
- Planning
- Executing
- Controlling
- Closing
29Phases of Traditional Project Management
- Scope
- Develop plan
- Launch
- Monitor / Control
- Close
30Levels of Traditional Project Management
31Quality Management
- Continuous Quality Management Model
- Process Quality Management Model
- Others
32W Edwards Deming
- A process approach
- Continuous improvement
- Small steps
33Demings 14 Points
- 1.Constancy Of Purpose
- 2.The New Philosophy
- 3.Cease Dependence On Inspection
- 4.End Lowest Tender Contracts
- 5.Improve Every Process
- 6.Institute Training On The Job
- 7.Institute Leadership
- 8.Drive Out Fear
- 9.Break Down Barriers
- 10.Eliminate Exhortations /Slogans
- 11.Eliminate Arbitrary Numerical Targets
- 12.Permit Pride Of Workmanship
- 13. Education
- 14.Top Management Commitment
34Managing Time
- Get a blank piece of paper !
- Learn to plan time
- Write down what you plan to do
- Think about what you have achieved at the end of
the day - Get smart and plan your project
- Use a software package
35What helps good project management
- Leadership
- Teams
- Lean systems
- Process not procedure
- Culture
36Lean Thinking
- committed leadership,
- a focus on the customer,
- integrated processes and teams,
- a quality driven agenda
- commitment to people
37Risk Management
- Identifying Risk
- Assessing Risk
- Planning Risk Response
- Risk Monitoring and Control
- Risk Assessment Example
38Procurement Management
- Planning Procurement
- Soliciting Requests for Proposals
- Managing RFP Questions and Responses
- Selecting Vendors
- Managing Contracts
- Closing Out the Contract
39Relationship between Traditional
ProjectManagement and Other Methodologies
40The Pain Curve
41Wysockis Three Approaches
- Traditional PM
- Adaptive PM
- Extreme PM
42Wysockis Approaches
- Whats needed
- How to get it / How to do it
- Are these clearly defined?
43Chapter 3Scoping the ProjectConditions of
Satisfaction
44Scope the Project
- Create a scoping document for your project
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47Defining the Project Communications tool called
the Conditions of Satisfaction
48Managing Client Expectations
- Sorting Wants versus Needs
- Developing Conditions of Satisfaction Listening
Feedback
49Conducting Milestone ReviewsCreating the Project
Overview Statement
50SMART Objectives
- Specific
- Measurable
- Assignable
- Realistic
- Time-related
51Success Criteria
- Clearly states the bottom-line impact
- Quantifies outcomes so success can be measured
52Parts of the POS
- Problem/Opportunity
- Project Goals
- Project Objectives
- Success criteria (Deliverables)
- Assumptions, risks, obstacles
53Attachments to the one page POS Project overview
statement
- Risk Analysis
- Financial Analysis
54Using the Joint Project Planning Sessionto
Develop the POS
55Submitting a Project for Approval
- Senior Management
- The Customer
- The Team
56Participants in the Approval Process
57Successful Projects
- Depends on your point of view
- Execs, users project team view success
differently - Is project successful if meets stated goals,
schedule budget? - Does project result in tangible, cost effective
business improvement for users?
Perception
58 Success as perceived by Execs
- Real business asset
- Cost controlled (low)
- Objectives achieved
- Not oversold
- Not over-committed
- Well managed
- effective controls, milestones achieved
Perception
59Success as perceived by Users
- Understood needs
- Has vital changes
- Implied service goals met
- Easy to use understand
- Can grow
Perception
60Success as perceived by Project Team
- Execs users happy with results
- Management committed supportive
- Necessary resources available
- enough, adequate
- Managed changes effectively
- Schedule realistic
- Gained experience
Perception
61Approval Criteria
62Project Approval Status
63The Project Definition StatementPDS is much more
detailed
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65The Curve to Avoid!
Progress
About 30 of the work done
70 to 80 of the time gone by
Time
The Curve To Avoid!
66End of Part One
67Sample Gantt Chart
The WBS is on the left, and each tasks start and
finish date are shown on the right using a
calendar timescale.
68Sample Network Diagram
Each box is a project task from the WBS. Arrows
show dependencies between tasks. The bolded tasks
are on the critical path. If any tasks on
the critical path take longer than planned, the
whole project will slip unless something is done.
69PMI PMBOKProject management Body of Knowledge
70Project Life Cycle (Frame)
Concept
Planning
Execution
Closeout
Operation
Maintenance
71PM Life Cycle (Wysocki)
- Five Phases
- Scope project
- Develop project plan
- Launch plan
- Monitor/control project project
- Close out project
72The Time Cost Quality Triangle
Time
Cost
Quality
73Logic Activity Network MS Project
74Lean Thinking
- Specify value
- Identify the value stream
- Flow
- Pull
- Perfection
75What helps good project management
- Leadership
- Teams
- Lean systems
- Process not procedure
- Culture
76Lean Thinking
- committed leadership,
- a focus on the customer,
- integrated processes and teams,
- a quality driven agenda
- commitment to people