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Project Management Techniques for Completing Projects On-Time and Within Budget

Project Management Techniques for Completing Projects On-Time and Within Budget Jennifer McNeill, Office of the CTO Oracle Public Sector State and Local Government. 1. Why Do IT Projects Fail?. Software Challenges Consulting Challenges Project Failure Communication Failure

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Project Management Techniques for Completing Projects On-Time and Within Budget

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  1. Project Management Techniques for Completing Projects On-Time and Within Budget • Jennifer McNeill, Office of the CTO • Oracle Public Sector State and Local Government 1

  2. Why Do IT Projects Fail? • Software Challenges • Consulting Challenges • Project Failure • Communication Failure • Executive Support • Project Best Practices

  3. Building a Project Management Library • Use Methodologies that work for your organization • Build a library to re-use (don’t re-invent the wheel) • A living repository (dynamically changing) • Use Requirements Management tools if possible • Use PMI Certified trainers if you don’t have historical data to build the library • Training Program should include: • Cost Management • Assessment • Requirements Management

  4. Building a Project Management Library • Use standard industry standard material to build the library • Use resources such as the PMI Body of Knowledge as reference material • ISO 9000 Certification standards will also assist • Capability Maturity Model (CMM) information can be utilized as well • Possibly use pieces of resources to build your personalized methodology

  5. Do it Right or Do it Over • Less than ½ of organizations have a Project Management Plan they have integrated into their business processes • Many Project Management plans are started and then not carried through • Management at times wants the project done quickly which deters the use of best practices

  6. The Reason Projects Fail • Project teams are not static (constantly changing staff or reducing the size of the project team • Lean resource availability jeopardizes the project team • Pressure to deliver causes people to panic, skipping important parts of the original project plan • The end result is shoddy • Repairing the errors created by sloppiness takes more time than dealing with the issues in the appropriate manner

  7. Keys to Successful Project Management • Planning does not have to take an enormous amount of time • Draw boundaries to create a prioritized set of deliverables • Draw from lessons learned from yours and other projects • Don’t try to reinvent the wheel • Use strong communication • Divert anything that takes away from project goals • Find repeatable processes and communicate these to all levels of the organization

  8. Keys to Successful Project Management • Executive Management Support • Best Practice use within the project • Key resource planning and utilization • Utilization of communication skills in an effective manner • Keeping the team on-board • Thorough understanding of the project requirements • Appropriate planning that reviews business processes and future requirements for the organization

  9. Project Management Best Practices • Understand the scope of the project • Does this make sense for the organization • Are there deterrents for successful completion of the project (including political issues) • Perform an Enterprise Risk/Benefit study to determine the value of the project • Determine the technological impact of the project

  10. Project Management Best Practices • Follow a structured initiation plan • Gain Executive understanding and Commitment • Make sure there is a designated project champion • Gather the necessary business and technical requirements to justify the project • Ensure that support from all levels is available throughout the life of the project • Create a structured project plan to determine overall scope and challenges

  11. Project Management Best Practices • Project Planning • Plan even with a smaller lifecycle of the project • Involve the stakeholders, sponsors and project team in planning meetings to ensure they understand the scope, challenges, etc. • Explain risks, deterrents with the organization and challenges the project will face

  12. Project Management Best Practices • Planning • Maintain realism in planning • Determine short-term “must-haves” • Include long-term planning as well • Create plan for weekly meeting with team and stakeholders to ensure communication is flowing

  13. Project Management Best Practices • Assess Requirements • Perform stakeholder interviews to determine the business issues around the project • Hold collective review planning continually to keep the project team focused and on the correct path (this also manages stakeholder’s expectations throughout the project) • Automate the requirements management process whenever possible to provide a central location for audit reports and status management

  14. Project Management Best Practices • Don’t Overload Milestones • Keep milestones actionable and close together (ideally no more than 3 weeks apart) • Closely spaced milestones provide opportunity for fast recovery

  15. Project Management Best Practices • Publicize your Plans • Distribute regular status reports in an efficient manner (email, intranet pages, project management software) • The more people are intimately familiar with the project plan, the more support there is for the project • Broad access increases the chance of finding a potential pitfall before it is too late

  16. Project Management Best Practices • Delegate Tasks • A project manager should not do it all (control freaks don’t work well as PMs) • Have system architects and lead architects manage the overall technical part of the project • Project Manager should manage and coordinate administrative and project planning issues

  17. Project Management Best Practices • Manage Your Vendors • Critical to have communication with vendors during planning phase • Especially true if the project is being outsourced or external resources are being used • For project execution, a single source is critical (Vendor’s PM or Lead Architect that will be full time) • Clarify requirements for reporting, time management, issue management, and penalties for not meeting these expectations (in writing)

  18. Project Management Best Practices • Execution and Control • Small team approach works best even in a big project (allows flexibility and communication is easier) • Empower Project and Team leaders to manager their areas of expertise (They need clout!) • Meet formally weekly to review milestones and measure progress • Meet informally each day with appropriate parties where problems may be occurring

  19. Project Management Best Practices • Automate whenever possible • Use requirements automation tools such as: • Telelogic Doors or Borlands Caliber RM • Use effective Project Management tools (preferably those already in use in the organization)

  20. Project Management Best Practices • Collaborate, Collaborate, Collaborate! • Team members will perform much better with effective communication • If a team is scattered, use software such as Webex for meetings • Eliminate excuses for team members to miss meetings (remove obstacles such as other project issues, etc.)

  21. Project Management Best Practices • Use Audits • Hold biweekly audits when possible to review progress (use separate resources for this practice) • Include in these estimates costs of actual versus budgeted resources • Keep audits short and sweet • Non personalize audits – ensure audit resources have the personality to eliminate team members taking things personally

  22. Project Management Best Practices • Measure Productivity • Develop standard criteria for measuring productivity (part of planning process) • Measure: • Deliverables • Costs being incurred • Defect detection • Resource utilization

  23. Project Management Best Practices • Practice Change Control • Use software configuration management • Utilize requirements management tools • Establish chain of command for any scope changes (during planning stages) • Ensure business and technical lead is consulted for every scope change

  24. Project Management Best Practices • Test • Test early and often • Hold walkthroughs periodically throughout the project • End user style demonstrations • Peer to peer code inspections • Information inspections • Allow time for acceptance testing and beta testing • Minimum amount of testing for a project should be 15% • If new technology or architecture is being used, testing should be 30% of the project

  25. Project Management Best Practices • Design concise implementation procedures • Develop step by step implementation procedures including: • Production test procedures • Installation Requirements • Develop contingency plans for problem management • Backout procedures • Production support steps

  26. Project Management Best Practices • Conduct a postmortem • Discuss issues that will improve the project • Collect all issues that have caused problems or delays in the project • Ensure they don’t become personalized

  27. Project Management Best Practices • Assess Project Temperature • Perform this process several times after completion of project • Document either successes or failures • Check requirements and design phases

  28. Questions? www.ciphersoftinc.com

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