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Project Management: A BRIEF Overview

Project Management: A BRIEF Overview. Greg Magnan Associate Professor Albers School of Business & Econ November 8, 2003. Agenda. A) What, why and life cycles stages of projects. What is a Project?.

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Project Management: A BRIEF Overview

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  1. Project Management:A BRIEF Overview Greg Magnan Associate Professor Albers School of Business & Econ November 8, 2003

  2. Agenda A) What, why and life cycles stages of projects

  3. What is a Project? • One-time (or infrequent) set of activities that use resources to accomplish an objective • An effort to create a unique product/service with a precisely defined, desired outcome • Constrained by an end-date and resources • May be of any duration (hours to years)

  4. Why Study Project Management? • Appear in all organizations, all functions • Perhaps 30-40% never completed • Business Dynamics/Customer Focus • Knowledge/Information Explosion • Limited Resources/ “Unlimited” to-do • “How stuff gets done”

  5. Project Life Cycle Stages

  6. I. Project Definition/Initiation 0. Selection • Identify the Need • Criteria (may differ for strategic or operational) • Resources • Level, Owner • Justification • Feasibility • Financial Returns / Risks • Rank Possible Projects

  7. I. Project Definition • State the Project • What, Why, When [scope] • Cost/Budget • Project Statement (short) • Action and end result • Time • Cost (optional) 1b. Charter • Scope + (risk limits, customer needs, spending limits, team composition, etc.)

  8. I. Project Definition 1c. Develop Objectives • Define benefits & measures of success • “What will this look like at the end?” • Identify constraints • Identify requirements

  9. SCOPE Checklist • Project Objectives • Deliverables • Milestones • Technical Requirements • Limits & Exclusions • Reviews with Customer

  10. Project Management Tradeoffs Project Priorities?

  11. II. Project Planning To organize the work / avoid future problems • Assemble Team • Determine Tasks (Work Breakdown Structure) • Assign Responsibility • Sequence Deliverables • Schedule Milestones / Deliverables • Schedule Resources • Identify Risks / Protect the Plan (mitigation plans)

  12. Leading Projects • People own what they help to create • Team members who truly understand the project will be more committed • Inspiration through meaning • Use team-based tools throughout • Show your appreciation for contributions • Empowerment through trust and respect • Stay on top of the details

  13. II. Project Planning • Assemble Project Team / Kickoff • Who will be on the team? • Team Phases • Forming/Storming/Norming/Performing • Motivation throughout project • Kickoff Meeting • Icebreaker / Sponsor / Team contract • Inclusive / “Parking Lot” for issues • Review Charter w/ team / Feedback

  14. II. Project Planning • Develop Work Breakdown Structure • A graphic or outline depicting how major deliverables relate to sub-elements • Establish specific outputs & accomplishments • Hierarchical listing of all project elements • May include several levels • Lowest level detailed tasks (work packages) • Work that can be assigned to individual or group • Measurable outcome • List major deliverables • Enables planning, scheduling, budgeting

  15. Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) • Involve project team in creation • Creative / Brainstorming / Post-its • “Mindmapping” • At lowest level, work packages should include a noun and a verb (e.g., “meet w/ customers”) • Short duration tasks that have a definite start and stop point, consume resources, and represent cost. • A control point in the project • Use a consistent level of detail throughout WBS

  16. WBS: Mindmap

  17. Work Packages • Defines work (what) • Ids how long • Ids a budget (WP cost) • ID resources (how much) • ID person responsible • ID monitoring points • Coding for info systems

  18. WBS Structure

  19. WBS Example

  20. II. Project Planning • Identify Resource Requirements • To avoid future resource problems and help assign responsibility • For each WBS element, consider: • Knowledge, skills, facilities, equipment, supplies, materials, special/unusual resources • Identify type, amount, and cost • ESTIMATE!

  21. Identify Resource Requirements

  22. II. Project Planning • Responsibility Assignment Matrix • To make responsibilities clear and visible • WBS elements down left side • Names of individuals/groups along top • Mark Primary responsibility (P) • One for each terminal element • Negotiate commitment from each person

  23. II. Project Planning • Sequence Deliverables • To help schedule work efficiently • Consider all WBS elements • Estimate calendar duration for each • List precedence for each task • May construct network diagram • CRITICAL PATH: path through the network showing minimum time needed • Delays to elements on the critical path delay the entire project!

  24. Project Scheduling: Node Elements

  25. PERT Diagram(Activity on Node)

  26. II. Project Planning • Schedule Deliverables / Gantt Chart • To provide basis for project monitoring • Identify start and finish dates • Review precedence to ensure that no terminal element starts or finishes too soon • Gantt charts, however, do NOT show precedence • Once again, uses WBS as main input

  27. Sample Gantt Chart

  28. II. Project Planning • Schedule Resources • “Resource the Plan” to help maintain commitment of resources • Resource managers allocate resources • Act in collaboration with Project Manager • Confirm or negotiate specific commitments for each resource • Be aware of resource manager’s constraints or policies (e.g., % res. util. limits)

  29. II. Project Planning • Risk Management / Protect the Plan • To help ensure that we meet or exceed the project objectives • Spot areas of concern ahead of time (risks) • Brainstorming / Mindmapping • Critical path? / Complex tasks / Unreliable resources • Estimate probabilities and impact! • Create contingency plans

  30. III. Project Implementation / Execution • Begin work on time • Monitor project • Progress against objectives • Progress against milestones • Resource use and cost • Human performance • Set performance/deliverable expectations in advance • Few slides…but longest project duration!

  31. III. Project Implementation / Execution • This is where the “art” of PM comes alive • Overcoming obstacles • Budgets, technologies, contractors • Motivating “peripheral” players • Problem solving • Manage Change • Need a process!

  32. III. Project Implementation / Execution • Status and Communication • Gantt Charts / Milestones • Sponsor • Areas to report • Schedule • Risks • Budget • Changes • Scope?

  33. Milestone Tracking

  34. Tacoma Narrows – Sept. 2003 Milestones

  35. IV. Project Delivery 14. Project Closeout & Evaluation • To ensure all objective were met and share lessons learned • Include closeout activities in WBS, resource requirements, RAM, and schedule • Review lessons learned • Identify Project Success Factors

  36. Other Issues • People • Communication • Cannot overestimate the need • Report out • Frequency, audience, tools, next steps/resolution • Software • Many options…but learn the techniques first!!!

  37. Conclusion… • Projects are everywhere • Can be actively managed • Science AND art • http://www.pmi.org/

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