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Applied Software Project Management

Applied Software Project Management. Project Schedules. Definition of a project. A completion of work which must satisfy performance, time, cost, and scope (PCTS) a multiple constraints or requests Precise scope is a must www.standishgroup.com Only 17% software projects meet PCTS

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Applied Software Project Management

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  1. Applied Software Project Management Project Schedules http://www.stellman-greene.com

  2. Definition of a project • A completion of work which must satisfy performance, time, cost, and scope (PCTS) a multiple constraints or requests • Precise scope is a must • www.standishgroup.com • Only 17% software projects meet PCTS • 80 billion dollars are wasted on problematic software project per year

  3. C=f(P,T,S) • P = performance • T = time • S= scope • C = cost C P C P S S T T

  4. PTCS • In principle of other discipline, the transformation between P (performance),T(time), C(cost) is true • To software development, the transformation is not true. • If you think you can add more people (more cost) and you can reduce the completion time. That is not true at all in software engineering • It is the well-known man-month mythic • More software engineering efforts , more true the principle

  5. What is project planning • Project planning is to answer questions • Do what? • How to do it? • Who is in charge (誰負責) • When to finish • At what cost • What kind of performance

  6. Using the work break down structure (WBS) • A project needs to answer • When to complete • Complete what • What is the cost • The only way to achieve this objective is to break down the work and then estimating • Fact: estimating error is inevitable

  7. WBS • In software project, typically we break down the work from project -> subsystem -> modules • When to stop? When a module is not too complicated but also not too detailed? • A general rule is: until you can precisely estimate its cost and time • Have we done a good job?

  8. What is a project schedule? • The project schedule is a calendar that links the tasks to be done with the resources that will do them. • Before a project schedule can be created, the project manager must have a work breakdown structure (WBS) and estimates. • The schedule is part of the project plan. http://www.stellman-greene.com

  9. Scheduling Project Work • Grantt chart (bar chart) • 1950-1960 • CPM (Critical Path Method) • PERT( Program evaluation and review techniques) – U.S. NAVY, add probability

  10. Producing a workable schedule • using critical path method leverage float labor, or resources • 你必須先找出 critical path 然後才能知道你有哪些人力,時間,資源,是浮動的,可以調配

  11. ES = early start (最快開始時間) • LS = late start (最遲開始時間) • EF = early finish (最快完成時間) • LF = late finish (最遲完成時間) • DU= duration 作業時間

  12. forward pass computationandbackward pass computation • compute ES, EF from the beginning of the network • compute LS, LF from the end to beginning

  13. critical task – ES=LS EF = LF • critical path – the path constituted by critical task • floating task – the task has a time bufferzone between EF and LF

  14. comments a reminder: the time in the network is estimated time. Typically, we will loosen the estimated time. people assigned to tasks in critical path must be very cautious not to delay the whole project if all the tasks are critical task – allowing no room for adjustments, no flexibility

  15. 長條圖

  16. 分配作業資源 and level resource 過渡使用資源案例

  17. This constraints make leveling resources impossible

  18. Leveling resources • when leveling resources is impossible the only way is • get more labor resource • or change C = f (P,T,S) • time critical leveling • fix time and let software find a possible leveling • resource critical leveling • fix resource, allow time to be increased

  19. 資源有效性(availability) • 一般而言人的有效性不會超過80% • 一天工作8小時大概只有6個小時真的有效 • 20%花在PDF • P:personal 個性 • F:fatigue 疲勞 • D:delay延遲,或等候下一步的訊息 • 80% 的有效性通常指作業員 • 研究顯示,腦力工作的人員比50%還低 • 了解參與專案人員的有效性十分重要,否則一定會有大災難

  20. Scheduling concepts:Effort vs. Duration • Effort represents the work required to perform a task. • Effort is measured in person-hours (or person-days, person-weeks, etc.) • It represents the total number of hours that each person spent working on the task. • Duration is amount of time that elapses between the time the task is started and the time it is completed. • Duration is measured in hours (or days, weeks, etc.) • It does not take into account the number of people performing the task http://www.stellman-greene.com

  21. Scheduling concepts:Slack and Overhead • Slack is the amount of time which any of the tasks can be delayed without causing the due date of the final task in the sequence to be delayed as well. • A tight schedule has very little slack; a delay in any task will cause a delay in the due date • Parkinson’s Law: “Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.” • Overhead is any effort that does not go to the core activities of the task but is still required in order for the people to perform it—a sort of “real world” cost of actually doing the work. • Two people performing a task will require more effort than one person doing the same task • Assigning two people to the task requires more effort, but the task has a shorter duration http://www.stellman-greene.com

  22. Building the project schedule • Allocate resources • For each task in the WBS, one or more resources must be assigned • Choose person or people for each task based on qualifications, familiarity and availability • Take overhead into account when calculating the duration of each task http://www.stellman-greene.com

  23. Building the project schedule • Identify dependencies • A task has a dependency if it involves an activity, resource or work product which is subsequently required by another task • Tasks may have dependencies because they require the same resource http://www.stellman-greene.com

  24. Building the project schedule • Identify dependencies (continued) • Every dependency has a predecessor, or a task that must be begun, in progress, or completed, for another task to begin • Identify the type of predecessor for each dependency http://www.stellman-greene.com

  25. Building the project schedule • Create the schedule • Most project schedules are represented using a Gantt chart • The Gantt chart shows tasks, dependencies and milestones using different shapes http://www.stellman-greene.com

  26. Building the project schedule • Reconcile the schedule with the organization’s needs • Once resources are allocated to each task, a final date can be calculated • If this date is unacceptable, the project plan must change • Either additional resources must be allocated to the project or the scope must be cut down • Brooks’ Law: “Nine women cannot have a baby in one month.” • In other words, some tasks can only be done by one person, no matter how critical they are. http://www.stellman-greene.com

  27. Building the project schedule • Add review meetings to the schedule • Progress reviews are meetings held regularly to check the progress of a project versus it's scheduled progress. • Milestone reviews are meetings which the project manager schedules in advance to coincide with project events. • The most common way for project managers to handle milestone reviews is to schedule them to occur after the last task in a project phase (such as the end of design or programming). http://www.stellman-greene.com

  28. Building the project schedule • Step 4: Optimize the schedule • The critical path is the sequence of tasks that represent the minimum time required to complete the project. • If a task is only on the critical path when delaying that task will delay the project. • Allocating resources to tasks on the critical path will reduce the project schedule; allocating them to other tasks will have less effect. • A resource is over-allocated if more than 100% allocated to multiple tasks simultaneously • If any resource is over-allocated, it means that there is a dependency between two tasks which was not discovered. • When this happens, the schedule is guaranteed to be inaccurate. Find and fix over-allocated resources. http://www.stellman-greene.com

  29. Don’t abuse buffers • A buffer is a task added to the schedule with no specific purpose except to account for unexpected delays. • This practice involves either adding extra tasks or padding existing tasks at strategic points in the schedule where overruns are “expected”. • Buffers can be useful: • On a year-long project, every programmer will take two weeks of vacation • Buffers can be used to account for this known delay • Buffers are often abused • The idea that overruns are expected means that there is an implicit assumption that the estimate is incorrect. • Buffers should not be used to add time to compensate for an inaccurate estimate. http://www.stellman-greene.com

  30. Project metrics • The baseline is the version of the schedule that has been approved • The schedule will change based on the actual work done by the project team. • When the deadline of the revised schedule is later than that of the baseline, the project has slipped. • Variance is the difference between the estimated effort in the baseline and the actual effort performed by the team. http://www.stellman-greene.com

  31. Project metrics • Earned value management tracks the project by considering effort “earned” against a budget only after it has actually been performed • The budgeted cost for work scheduled (BCWS) is the estimated effort of the actual tasks that appear on the schedule to date. • The actual cost of work performed (ACWP) is the effort spent on the tasks in the schedule that have actually been completed by the development team members. • Variance = BCWS – ACWP http://www.stellman-greene.com

  32. Project metrics • The cost performance index is used to compare projects with each other or to compare phases within a project • CPI is calculated by dividing BCWS / ACWP (budgeted cost for work scheduled/actual cost for work performed) and multiplying by 100 to express it as a percentage. • A CPI of 100% means that the estimated cost was exactly right and the project came in exactly on budget. • A CPI under 100%, the work cost less effort than planned; a CPI greater than 100% means that the estimate was not adequate for the work involved. • For example, if the programming tasks took twice as long as estimated but every other type of task in the project took less time than estimated, the total variance for the project might still be low. However, the problem can still be pinpointed by calculating the CPI for each phase of development. http://www.stellman-greene.com

  33. Real Project Evaluation • When a project is finished, it is important to evaluate the project • If a schedule does not run as planned, the problem could be • Programmer’s skill does not meet the expectation • PM has problem in create and analyze a WBS which make schedule impossible to achieve • Some real technical difficulties do occurs http://www.stellman-greene.com

  34. Dig the truth and story • As a higher-level PM, you just need to dig the story when a schedule does not work as planned. • Be aware that it becomes a 批鬥大會 • Some of these findings can be collected and improved in your next project. http://www.stellman-greene.com

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