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Kimberly Harper Director of Finance & Portfolio Mgmt Joshua Mauk Information Security Officer

Kimberly Harper Director of Finance & Portfolio Mgmt Joshua Mauk Information Security Officer. University of Nebraska Computing Services Network. Computing Services Network (CSN). Central administrative IT department for the University system Directed by Walter Weir, University CIO.

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Kimberly Harper Director of Finance & Portfolio Mgmt Joshua Mauk Information Security Officer

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  1. Kimberly Harper Director of Finance & Portfolio Mgmt Joshua Mauk Information Security Officer University of Nebraska Computing Services Network

  2. Computing Services Network (CSN) • Central administrative IT department for the University system • Directed by Walter Weir, University CIO

  3. Agenda Portfolio and Project Management • Where we were • Where we are • Where we’re headed

  4. Competing Needs Board of Regents UNCA State of NE

  5. Never Enough Resources • Too many projects, incoming service requests, applications to deploy… • No free resources • Asked to do more with less • So how do we… • Make sure we do what really matters? • Make sure we are aligned with the strategic goals? • Assure that we will have a high probability of being successful? • Our solution…Portfolio Management

  6. What is Portfolio Management? • Dynamic decision process, whereby a list of projects is constantly updated and revised. • New projects are evaluated, selected, and prioritized • Existing projects may be accelerated, killed, or reprioritized • Resources are allocated and reallocated • Includes: • Resource allocation decisions • Which projects will get funding? Which will receive top priority? • Business strategy (alignment) decisions • Balance decisions • Risk vs. return, maintenance vs. growth, short-term vs. long-term projects

  7. Portfolio Management • We have been using a portfolio management tool since 2000 • Our focus has been mainly on monitoring and reporting • This allows us to answer questions like: • What services do we provide? • What projects are in the work? • How are our projects progressing? • How are we spending our resources?

  8. Portfolio Management • We want to expand our capabilities and be more strategic • We want to more accurately & objectively answer questions such as: • How are our IT projects & services aligned to University goals/initiatives? • Are we focusing our efforts on projects & services that will give us the best return on our investments? • Are we utilizing our resources in the most effective & efficient way.

  9. Portfolio Management • Identify CSN initiatives & map to NU strategic framework

  10. Portfolio Management • Identify how projects align to CSN’s and University’s initiatives Initiative #1: Implement, develop and maintain information systems to support University-wide administrative needs. • Projects that support CSN’s initiative 1: • s 44 open projects s28 enhancement projects • s 15 service activities s 8 priority projects

  11. Portfolio Management • Want to take valuable data, combine it with our strategic plan, to develop a tactical plan appropriate for future needs Currently: We are primarily staffed to “keep the business running”…and end up not being able to invest resources into “transforming” the business. Future: There are several major upcoming projects. Are we staffed and funded to spend 90% of our resources on “keeping the lights on”?

  12. But this isn’t enough… • Need to: • Improve & expand portfolio management • Move from reporting/monitoring to aid planning and strategic decision making • Implement project management • Do more and better with less or same resources • Change our organization • Create a culture around project and portfolio management

  13. Business Drivers for Improvement • Need to be viewed as a value-added service • Invest in continuous improvement – do more/better with resources • Need to be prepared for the future • Several major upcoming projects • Anticipated budget constraints • Evolving technology • Support the University’s and CSN’s initiatives • Be cost effective and accountable to the citizens of the state • Promote strategic organizations by developing and supporting operational and strategic-planning tools and processes • Need to address perceived PM gaps (identified via staff interviews) • Standards and procedures, communication of priorities, integrated tool sets, education/training, improved value metrics • Doing the right things AND doing them right

  14. How do we address these concerns? • Change the current IT organization • Strategic planning • Better management of resources • Succession planning • Create a Project Management Office • Doing the right things, and doing them right • Do more with the same resources

  15. Create a Project Management Office (PMO) • Goals of the PMO: • Ensure time, cost, scope and quality meet stakeholder requirements • Make more informed decisions about prioritization • More efficiently utilize current resources • Provide customers with single point of entry for all project requests • Provide leadership with timely and accurate reporting to assist in decision making • Support the mission and strategic initiatives of the University

  16. Types of PMOs • Weather Station • Control Tower • Resource Pool

  17. Weather Station • Takes weather readings and makes forecasts • Project Progress • Planned vs. actual • Issue and Risk Monitoring • Addresses management disconnect between money spent and understanding of project status. Advantages Pitfalls • Easy start to a PMO • Creates consistency in terms, PM methodology and progress reports • Standardization of tools used for PM • Authority to ensure cooperation • Participation viewed as optional • Viewed as ‘red tape’ • Not authorized to tell PM’s and clients how to do things

  18. Control Tower • Creates standards for Project Management • Consults on following standards • Enforces Standards • Continuous Improvement • Addresses the desire to do more with less. Advantages Pitfalls • Detailed Standards • Projects are prioritized based on need and resource availability • Not viewed as optional • PM is recognized as COE or as a business asset • Temptation to ‘over-control’ • Underestimate additional workload for PM’s • Audit Mentality vs. Coaching

  19. Resource Pool • Pool of PM’s that managers and executives ‘recruit’ for their projects. • Addresses ability to select, improve, nurture and retain PM talent. Advantages Pitfalls • Helps ensure projects are effectively done. • Skilled PM’s • PM’s have authority • PM’s have tools needed • How do we ensure the right projects get done? • Who governs the tools and methodology? • How do we capture lessons learned?

  20. CSN’s PMO • We chose the “Control Tower” PMO • This type of PMO will enable us to meet our goals: • Ensure time, cost, scope and quality meet stakeholder requirements • Make more informed decisions about prioritization • More efficiently utilize current resources • Provide customers with single point of entry for all project requests • Provide leadership with timely and accurate reporting to assist in decision making • Support the mission and strategic initiatives of the University • We evaluated key attributes of a PMO* and identified how CSN would implement a PMO to achieve these goals *Corporate Executive Board’s “Key Developments in the PMO: 2006 Update for Chief Information Officers”

  21. Key Attributes of a PMO Source: Corporate Executive Board’s “Key Developments in the PMO: 2006 Update for Chief Information Officers”

  22. CSN’s PMO Objectives • Single, integrated tool Portfolio, project, resource and work demand management capabilities • Project & portfolio governance Establish standardized project management framework • Project manager coaching & development Train, mentor, and provide standardized templates • Best practice collection & dissemination Analyze project successes/failures to raise awareness, distill best practices & educate on benefits of project management • Project idea screening Develop effective project business cases, benefits estimations and selection processes • Portfolio definition Determine essential components of CSN’s project portfolio • Portfolio prioritization Create comprehensive, fact-based assessment criteria to ensure optimal deployment of CSN resources

  23. CSN’s PMO Objectives (cont’d) • Portfolio resource monitoring & allocation Monitor resource availability to mitigate resource conflicts and shortfalls • Business case development Create standard business case templates to capture project lifecycle costs, benefits, and risks • Requirements definition Translate customer needs into specific project deliverables and outcomes • Resource coordination Identify and allocate resources required for individual projects • Project planning Manage project management lifecycle using actionable performance metrics & project management methodologies • Metrics tracking & reporting Collect/report project, demand and resource management metrics to allow for better decision making • Risk management & mitigation Audit/track project risks throughout the project management lifecycle

  24. PMO Implementation • Develop PMO project management plan • Serve as a role model • Stakeholder communication - KEY • Establish standards and procedures • Project classification, governance, templates • Identify/acquire PMO resources • PMO lead, Project managers, PMIS & support staff • Education/Training of stakeholders • Standards & procedures, PMIS • Pilot projects • Promote PM processes/tools to other University units & partners

  25. Thank You! Kimberly Harper kkharper@nebraska.edu Joshua Mauk jmauk@nebraska.edu

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