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Just Enough Project Management. Course OutlineBackgroundProject Management and why we need itDeveloping VCU's PM methodology Project Phases and RequirementsDefinitionPlanning Monitoring and ControlCloseoutQuestions
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1. Just Enough Project Management The Backpackers Guide to Lightweight Project Management
2. Just Enough Project Management Course Outline
Background
Project Management and why we need it
Developing VCU’s PM methodology
Project Phases and Requirements
Definition
Planning
Monitoring and Control
Closeout
Questions & Discussion
3. Just Enough Project Management So, what are we talking about?
Project Management is:
The application of knowledge, skills, tools, techniques, people, and systems focused on meeting or exceeding stakeholder needs.
A discipline that will support the planning, implementation, tracking, and control of projects.
4. Just Enough Project Management What is lightweight project management?
Project Management’s body of accumulated technical knowledge can be overwhelming
Full blown PM (as advocated by the Project Management Institute) is great for building satellites and submarines
VCU needed a more agile PM methodology
PMI and PMBOK
VITA
Best Practices in Higher Education
5. Just Enough Project Management VCU Project Management principles:
Requirements scale up with project complexity
Complexity is determined by cost, time, resources and risk
Project planning is essential but there is no one magic formula
Low overhead with high degree of flexibility for project managers
Focus on what’s important in our environment
Anything that does not work we will change
6. Just Enough Project Management Why do we even need a PM methodology?
Since July 1, 2008 VCU has operated as a Tier III institution under the Restructured Higher Education Financial and Administrative Operations Act
Greater autonomy and control in IT, but required to develop and follow our own policies, standards and procedures in four areas of IT management:
Security
Infrastructure, Architecture, Operations
Accessibility
Project Management and Auditing
7. Just Enough Project Management The ‘A’ word…
VCU IT projects are subject to auditing by both Assurance Services and APA
Audit investigations will focus on:
Project planning
Project tracking
Status updates
Project governance
Use the Project Management Information and Tracking system and you will have those covered
If you don’t, then CYFA
8. Just Enough Project Management Beyond the ‘A’ word…
A repository of project information with consistent metrics facilitates better managerial decision making
Organizations that implement and follow a disciplined project management approach realize significant improvements in project performance and customer satisfaction
9. Just Enough Project Management Proof is in the pudding…
Companies that implemented PM methodology achieved improvements of:
80% better ROI
20% reduction in project time
30-35% more successful project delivery
Companies without one experience 74% project failure rate in achieving promised ROI, schedule, or deliverables
Source: Forrester Research
10. Just Enough Project Management So, how do I know if it is a project?
A temporary endeavor with an established beginning and end time that has a set of defined tasks and assigned resources, undertaken to deliver a unique information technology product, service or result.
11. Just Enough Project Management Congratulations, it is a project…now what?
Before you manage a project be sure you can answer these three questions:
What, when all is said and done, is the point of this?
Who in authority wants this to succeed, who can define success, and how will it be measured?
Who has the authority to make decisions and resolve issues, or will delegate their authority if needed?
12. Just Enough Project Management The ultimate point of any IT project is to deliver a business improvement of some kind – be sure you can define what that will be
Just because a project is worthwhile does NOT mean it will be a success
Important to remember that not everyone will want the improvement – make sure you know who does and who does not
Recognize that Project Management is ultimately about managing people and change
13. Bonus Topic Business Change Management
Analyze your stakeholders – who supports, who resists, and why
Degree of involvement – who will do what work and make what decisions
Metrics – by what measure will the sponsor decide if the project is a success
Training – how will business users do their work the new way
COMMUNICATIONS – LISTEN, INFORM, PERSUADE
14. Just Enough Project Management The Whos down in Whoville…
Every VCU IT project must have a named:
Sponsor
Individual who makes the case for the project
Define project goals, secure resources, establish internal project priorities, and resolve intra- and inter-organizational issues and conflicts
Project Manager
Responsible for all aspects of the project’s performance
15. Just Enough Project Management Step 1 – Understand and Define the Project
Develop a Project Definition
Objective
Business Goal
Deliverables
Scope
Output is known as Statement of Work (SOW), Project Definition, Project Initiation Document, etc.
Purpose of project management is to insure the deliverables achieve the objective that realize the business goal
16. Just Enough Project Management The objective of this project is to build the software necessary to provide all VCU students access to their Financial Aid information via the Web. The project will be completed when, in six months, the software has been developed, tested, and demonstrated to comply with specifications. Training staff is within scope, but notification of students is not. The project will be successful when the software is in productive use and meets the performance goals established by the Financial Aid office.
17. Just Enough Project Management PMO Web site has two Requirements Analysis documents* to help with project definition
To define your project:
Meet with Project Sponsor and primary business unit stakeholders
Perform a requirements gathering
Document, review, signoff
Avoids the ‘But-I-Thought-You-Were-Going-To’ syndrome
18. Just Enough Project Management Using the results of the Requirements Analysis, determine the project’s complexity level using the Project Classification Worksheet*
Fast Track
Low Complexity
Medium Complexity**
High Complexity**
Project classification determines which plan components are required*
** Not covered in this course – contact PMO
19. Just Enough Project Management At end of the Project Definition phase, insure you have:
Approved Project Definition/Statement of Work
Identified sponsor and decision-maker(s)
Budget Amount and Budget Code identified
Project Classification Level established
Plan components need to develop
20. Just Enough Project Management LAB # 1 - Develop the objective statement
Request from CTE to implement electronic evaluations for all faculty by Fall semester
Total budget $9000, total time 70 hours, one person from CTE and two from your unit
Looked at three systems, chosen one just now on the market
Vendor will provide installation services
21. Just Enough Project Management The objective of this project is to implement the software and hardware necessary to provide electronic evaluations of all teaching faculty via the Web. The project will be completed when, before the Fall 2010 term begins, the system has been installed, tested, and demonstrated to comply with specifications. The project will be successful when the software is in productive use and meets the performance goals established by the Center for Teaching Excellence.
22. Just Enough Project Management Who’s We, Kimosabe?
Step 2 – Build Your Team
‘We’ versus ‘They’
Make sure everyone required for project success is part of ‘we’
Core Team and Extended Team
CT are committed and do heavy lifting
ET consists of SMEs, others minimally or moderately involved
23. Just Enough Project Management Hang Together or Hang Separately…
It’s important to remember that some team members are eggs and some are ham
As PM, focus on the hams to bring home the bacon
Every task and every team member is important, but not equally important
There’s a Critical Path and Critical People on every project – focus your attention on both
24. Just Enough Project Management Insert Tab A into Slot B…
Step 3 – Plan the Work
Conduct planning sessions to determine all the tasks required to accomplish the project’s objective
Do not get distracted by “when” - object is to identify all tasks that must be done regardless of order
Do not get distracted by “who” – assignment of tasks will be done later
25. Just Enough Project Management Fast Track Projects
Three or less personnel, $10K or less total cost, and 80 hours or less total time
Use the Fast Track Project Worksheet Template* on the PMO Web site
Minimal project information required on key tasks (maximum of five)
While FT projects may be small, the work still consumes resources and time
26. Just Enough Project Management Low Complexity Projects - Greater than 80 and less than 240 hours; greater than two and less than 10 personnel; greater than $10,000 and less than $100,000
Work Breakdown Structure – WBS*
Goal is to break down all the work needed to accomplish the objective into short, straightforward tasks
First level, second level, third level tasks - it helps to be good at outlining
Focus on completing first level tasks first
You will need to update, revise, add, change tasks
27. Just Enough Project Management WBS - continued
Identify milestone events – needed for PMIT and as something significant to celebrate
Do not hesitate to ask for help – SMEs, other PMs, team members, etc.
Steal good ideas – look at similar successful project plans in PMIT, on the Internet, etc.
If project scope encompasses multiple objectives, consider designating Team Leads to plan work tasks in specific areas
Balance is key – too fine a breakdown you will overestimate the schedule, too coarse and you will underestimate it
28. Just Enough Project Management Step 4 – Assign the Work
Fast Track projects – assign three or less personnel individual hours to the five or less tasks
Low Complexity projects – develop a Resource Breakdown Structure (RBS)* to assign all tasks the resources required to accomplish them
29. Just Enough Project Management Resource Breakdown Structure – RBS*
A multiple-to-one relationship between resources and tasks- many resources may be required for one task
People
Hardware/software
Facilities
Materials
Equipment
Document the role all personnel have in each task
30. Just Enough Project Management Step 5 – Schedule* the Work
Planning a schedule is an art, it is where you will earn your $ as a PM
First, determine how long a task SHOULD take if everything goes right
Then, think of all the things that could delay it
Pick something in the middle
If your WBS has the right detail, most tasks will take one – two weeks
Optimism and padding are your enemies
31. Just Enough Project Management Task Dependencies
Many tasks can happen in parallel
Some tasks depend on the completion of previous tasks before they can start (finish-to-start dependency)
The longest timeline through the project’s dependent tasks is called the Critical Path
Demark the CP with milestone events
Clearly identifiable
Deliver something tangible
Easier to track progress
32. Just Enough Project Management Step 6 – COMMUNICATE, COMMUNICATE, COMMUNICATE: Communications Plan*
Critical role for a PM during implementation
Know your audience
Tailor communications to them
Develop prototypes and review results
When in doubt, send it out - deliver bad news IMMEDIATELY
Status reports should convey not just what you’ve accomplished but highlight upcoming critical work and needed decisions
33. Just Enough Project Management Step 7 – Budget and Spending
Project budget is usually not PM responsibility
Spending plan* allocates budget:
Catalog everything the project must pay for and when
Hardware
Software
Services
Other
Break down into multiple plans if spending occurs throughout the project
34. Just Enough Project Management Every project should have a contingency reserve set according to risk
It total spending in all plans exceeds total budget, you have two choices – more budget or less project
PM performance at a State sponsored institution of higher education is greatly measured by how well the budget is managed
If using outside vendor or consultant - managing them is key to controlling your budget
35. Just Enough Project Management Step 8 – Quality Management Test Plan*
The art of testing and developing a test plan
Decide what you need to test, when, and how
There are operational tests and functional tests
Operational verifies system components work
Functional verifies they work correctly
Every test should have a detailed test script so easy a caveman can do it
Every test will require testers and resources – identify them and make sure they will be available when the test is scheduled
36. Just Enough Project Management Testing Tips
System implementers do not make good testers
Identifying problems is why you test – do not attempt to suppress bad results
Insure you schedule the right personnel and sufficient time to review test results
Results of one test often drive the next
When in doubt, test again
37. Just Enough Project Management End of Project Planning Phase
All plan components are developed
Fast Track
Worksheet
Low Complexity
WBS
RBS
Schedule
Communications Plan
Quality Management Test Plan
38. Just Enough Project Management LAB # 2 – Develop a communications plan for the project in Lab #1
Request from CTE to implement electronic evaluations for all faculty by Fall semester
Total budget $9000, total time 70 hours, one person from CTE and two from your unit
Looked at three systems, chose one just now on the market
Vendor will provide installation services
39. Just Enough Project Management Project Monitoring and Control - Status Updates
PM is required to update schedule, spending, scope in a Low Complexity project at least once every two weeks
More frequent updates may be needed depending on sponsor & stakeholder needs, nature of project and the project team
Goal is to track performance of tasks, expenditures, and any scope change requests
Focus on Critical Path and make adjustments quickly and decisively to stay on schedule and within budget
40. Just Enough Project Management Change Management
Any changes to the project’s budget or scope that exceed what the PM can cover with the contingency reserve should follow a formal process
Change Request
Sponsor Review
If approved, PM revises project plan accordingly, retains original version
Beware of scope creep…
41. Just Enough Project Management Issue Log*
During implementation you will have issues
Record every issue that takes longer than 24 hours to resolve
Describe the issue’s impact on the project and when it must be resolved to avoid that impact
If a decision is needed communicate the issue to the appropriate decision maker with options and a recommendation
Assign the responsibility for resolving the issue to one person
42. Just Enough Project Management Once the issue is resolved, describe the resolution in detail – this can be valuable information for your fellow PMs
If decisions/actions are taken that you feel will ultimately diminish the project, record them and your concerns (be nice)
In situations where vendors or consultants play a major role in your project, consider having a jointly updatable issue log
43. Just Enough Project Management Thank God that’s over…
Closeout – the project (finally) ends
Use the Closeout Checklist* to verify:
All project tasks are 100% completed and any that are not have a resolution plan
Deliverables are accepted
All spending is completed and accounts reconciled
Production operational considerations are met
Scheduled training is complete
Documentation has been turned over
Project resources are returned
Record any Lessons Learned
44. Just Enough Project Management Course Take-Aways
Before you start make sure you can answer three questions:
What, when all is said and done, is the point of this (the business improvement)?
Who in authority wants this to succeed, can define success, and how it will be measured?
Who has the authority to make decisions, resolve issues, and/or delegate their authority?
45. Just Enough Project Management Purpose of Project Management is to insure the deliverables meet the objective which accomplishes the business goal
Project Management is ultimately about managing people and change
Communication skills are critical
Listen
Inform
Persuade
46. Just Enough Project Management Plan the work and work the plan
Understand that no plan is ever perfect and that changes will be needed
PM emphasis on Schedule, Budget, Communications
When tasks take longer than planned
Analyze what happened, why, and what could have been done to prevent it
Focus on Critical Path tasks – delay one, delay all
Learn and adjust the schedule accordingly
If the project is NOT on schedule and/or within budget - prepare your analysis of what, why, & what can be done
47. Just Enough Project Management Projects finish on time, within budget, and with all deliverables as promised when:
Everyone who has a task to perform knows exactly what they should do and when, and has the resources needed to do that task
Tasks are short enough that everyone has a sense of urgency to complete them on time
The PM is proactively monitoring CP progress and knows when tasks are at risk of being late
Corrective action is taken quickly and decisively
UPOD – Under Promise Over Deliver
PMO is here to help you succeed
48. Just Enough Project Management
Questions & Discussion
James Thomas
jcthomas@vcu.edu
8-9954