Title: Plan for Success or Plan to Survive
1Plan for Success or Plan to Survive?
- Darcia Pope
- Regional Director, IMIS Enterprise Services
2Three Lessons Learned
- Projects where plans
- Are designed only for survival are not successful
- Begin with the end in mind will result in better
organizational benefits - Integrate project management and change
management methodology are more effective
Over 70 of major change projects fail to fully
deliver the desired results
3Agenda
- RBS project background
- What is planning for survival?
- What is planning with the end in mind?
- Why an integrated approach?
- Lessons learned
- Questions
4Regional Business Systems Mandate
- A single business system solution that will
enable the ability to improve business processes
and better leverage our people in order to
deliver quality care
People
Business
RBS
Technology
5Why a Single Business System Solution?
- Increasing requirements for common business
practices and consolidated information - Health region consolidated
- Inadequate business systems
- Varied and duplicate processes
- Limited consolidated reporting
6Unique Multi Authority Partnership
- Joint licensing with PeopleSoft across
authorities - Created immediate opportunities to
- Collaborate to develop and implement PeopleSoft
- Integrate best practices into a shared work
product - Leverage experience / expertise with a shared
project structure - Foundation for longer term opportunities
- Enhance partnership processes
- Invest together in other IT initiatives
- Increased ability to evolve with changes in
health care - Partner with other Health Authorities
7RBS Scope
PeopleSoft
ESP and Procura Upgrade Loki Implementation
Finance 8.4
AccountsPayable
SCM 8.4
HCM 8.3
Inventory
GeneralLedger
HumanResources
Payroll
SystemModules
HumanResources
Payroll
Time Capture
Time Capture
Purchasing
Asset Mgmt
ePro
8Shared Development Phased Go Lives
9What is Planning for Survival?
- Planning where the focus emphasizes
- Being on time and on budget rather than quality
- Completing tasks on time rather than focusing on
impact. - The use of external resources as pair of hands
rather than as mentors to develop internal
capability
10On Time on Budget
- Most projects begin with defined drivers, a
budget and target completion dates - Our project plans and resource strategies were
developed to meet these requirements - We leveraged internal people where possible
- Strategies were influenced by what we could
afford - Timelines were based on burn rate
- Constant scope management required as new
organizational requirements were identified
11Completing Tasks First Priority
- Our tight timelines and fixed budgets influenced
our strategies - Focus on product development
- Rigid testing cycles and sign off deadlines
- Higher tolerance to go live with testing issues
- Limited impact assessment, consultation and
communication with users - Reluctance to involve specialists (i.e. trainers)
- Issue resolution and decision making were
influenced by deadlines rather than by impact - Limited rigor assessing readiness
12Pair of Hands
- We tried to recruit the best in the
organization to participate in the project - As subject matter experts and process owners
- Limited technical resources due to concurrent
initiatives - Unable to recruit internal change agents or
experts - Internals pulled between project and operations
- We had limited experience implementing large IT
project - Therefore, relied heavily on external resources
with extensive experience, but mostly in a
tactical role - Minimal opportunities or strategies for knowledge
transfer - Significant costs associated with externals
13What is Planning with the End in Mind?
Optimization
P RODUCT IVI TY
Organizational Readiness
Stabilization
Current State
Go-Live
TIME
14Why Plan with the End in Mind?
- Clearly defined and accepted success criteria
will determine - Strategies for recruiting resources
- Degree of change management
- Required timelines and finances
- Issue resolution and decision making processes
- Acceptance and sign off processes
- Partnership guidelines
- Will maximize collaboration, efficiency, and
quality
15Planning for Go Live
- Some Typical Strategies
- Communicate end state and project plans/progress
- Train users on how to use the system
- Ensure effective project management
- Sponsors oversee project plans and issues
- Provide project support post go live
- Probable Results
- Drop in productivity with eventual return to
current state levels
16Planning for Stabilization
- Some Typical Strategies
- Understand and document business process gaps
between current state and end state - Involve stakeholder to create gap solutions
- Test gap solutions in parallel testing
- Include gap solutions (process/roles) in training
- Involve users in testing, training, and support
- Probable Results
- Increased willingness and ownership to address
issues and stabilize system and operations
17Planning for Optimization
- Some Typical Strategies
- Integrate systems with optimal processes
- Take time to align organization with new
processes - Train people to use the system in support of
optimal processes - Develop internal expertise to implement and
maintain the optimal processes - Align sponsorship to optimal end state
- Probable Results
- Final productivity will exceed current level
18Why an Integrated Approach?
- Project management and change management need to
be integrated to ensure - Project activities are executed in a way that
build stakeholder support (i.e. users involved in
testing) - Systems and processes are aligned
- Project plans align with organizational
priorities - Any new requirements are appropriately planned
for - Ownership is defined and reinforced at all stages
- There is high user and stakeholder acceptance of
the plans, product, processes and end state
19Integrated Implementation Approach
Project Initiation Vision, funding, sponsorship,
scope, strategies, plans, people
Sustainment Stabilization, optimization
Project Execution Design, development, testing,
conversion, support
20Project Initiation Lessons Learned
- Clearly define success criteria, vision,
strategies and boundaries - Assess and build leader support for end state
before launching project - Recruit internal project resources based on
sustainment structure - Ensure plans in place for increasing internal
capability - Recruit sponsors by stakeholder group not just
functional area - Ensure adequate funding and time for all
strategies, including user involvement, process
mapping, knowledge transfer
21Project Execution Lessons Learned
- Ensure project management team is committed to an
integrated approach - Actively involve users in design, testing,
training, communication, issue identification /
resolution, and support - Assess risks and readiness continuously using
various means - Reinforce defined responsibilities for decision
making, sign off, performance management through
PM processes - Use face to face communication supported by
print, web, etc - Develop hands-on integrated training linked
to post go live support mechanisms
22Sustainment Lessons Learned
- Develop and test key sustainment processes during
project execution (i.e. maintenance of training
or of key tables) - Define key metrics and means for measuring post
go live stabilization - Ensure funding and plans in place to support any
out of scope work - Manage retention of knowledge and key resources
at all stages of the project - Begin transition to sustainment early
- Assess lessons and ensure they influence future
projects
23In Closing
- My new role provides an opportunity to ensure the
lessons learned are applied to future projects - Enterprise Services allows for coordination and
integration between project initiation, project
management, and change management - Ultimately, we strive to plan and implement
projects for long term success, not short term
survival
24Questions