Chapter-2 54eedfbf77dec

Post on 12-Jan-2016

219 views 0 download

Tags:

description

c

Transcript of Chapter-2 54eedfbf77dec

Project management and evaluation

By Sunesh Hettiarachchi

B.Sc, MBA, MACS, MBCS, IDPM

1–1

What is a Project?

• What is a project?

• Planned set of interrelated tasks to be executed over a

fixed period and within certain cost and defined specification to

produce a product or a service.

• Major Characteristics of a Project

• Has an established objective.

• Has a defined life span with a beginning and an end.

• Has specific time, cost, and performance requirements (scope).

1–2

The Triple Constraint

Cost

how much?

Quality/Scope

how good?

Time how fast?

3

The Three P’s

• Program- operates over the long-term, and is

designed to use the organization’s resources to

impact a specific subject area that is part of an

organization’s mission.

• Project- has a beginning and end, defined resources,

and creates a unique product or service.

• Process- part of the ongoing operations of the

organization; may be introduced or changed over

time, but once established, an organizational process

operates on a continuous basis without a specified

end. 1–4

Example - Program and Project

• Program name : “Champions of Change : Rebuilding

America’s Infrastructure”

• Estimated budget : 48 billion dollars

• Number of projects : 15000 projects

• Capacity : 65000 people

• Duration : 3 years

• Purpose : To rebuild United State of America

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IqTzjLTL_Ug&feature=relmfu

1–5

Project failure

• Examples for project failures…

1–6

IBM 7030

• “In 1956, a group of computer scientists at IBM set out to

build the world's fastest supercomputer. Five years later,

they produced the IBM 7030 , the world fastest computer.

But the 7030 was considered a failure.

• “IBM's original bid to Los Alamos was to develop a

computer 100 times faster than the system it was meant

to replace, and the 7030 came in only 30 to 40 times

faster. “

1–7

IBM 7030

• “Because it failed to meet its goal, IBM had to drop IBM

7030 's price to $7.8 million from the planned $13.5

million, which meant the system was priced below cost.

The company stopped offering the 7030 for sale, and only

nine were ever built.”

• This project has been recorded as one of the biggest

project failed in the history.

• “No proper technical competency hired for the project”

1–8

SAP project failure

• Shane Company – SAP ERP project failure overview

(2008)

• “The initial project cost was budgeted or planned for $10 million but

ended up costing approximately $36 million and was planned for 1

year but ended up taking approximately 3 years.”

• Reasons:-

• An improper budget and implementation plan.

• Scope and cost were not properly managed.

• Poor or undefined processes along with poor or untested system

functionality.

1–9

What is Project Management?

• Project management is a set of principles, practices, and

techniques applied to lead project teams and control

project schedule, cost, and performance risks to result in

delighted customers.

1–10

• Project Management in Your Organization

• What are the current methods of project management in your

organization?

• What project management issues is your organization facing?

11

Practical issues of project management

• Accomplish with shared resources often only available on

part-time basis

• Require cross-functional team work

• Involve uncertainty and are subject to change during

execution

• Subject to specific deadlines and time and resource

constraints

• Project manager often lacks functional authority over

team members

12

Proven Benefits of Project Management

• Provides clear roles, responsibilities, activities and

schedules for team efforts

• Includes a method for considering the consequences of

decreasing or increasing funds, resources, time, or quality

• Specifies a detailed plan of how to achieve our objectives

• Assists in the realistic assignments of tasks and

responsibilities to team members according to the skills

and resources available

13

Proven Benefits of Project Management (contd..)

• Gives structure to communicating the progress of projects

• Allows teams to identify potential problems and take

preventive action early

• Keeps management officers and project stakeholders

well-informed and supportive

• Helps manage pressure for expanding the scope of

projects without proper decision criteria and analysis of

changes

14

Let’s practice

• Activity 1

15

Diverse Skills Needed for Project Management

• Planning skills—the ability to plan the use or organizational resources of time, personnel, budget, facilities, equipment, and supplies to achieve organizational objectives

• Technical skills—the specific professional technical skills needed for a project.

• People skills—the ability to manage and motivate people who will implement the project activities, communicate effectively with stakeholders, and resolve conflicts and interpersonal problems.

16

What skills make the best project managers so

good?

• Communication: listening, persuading, negotiating

• Organizational: planning, goal-setting, analyzing

• Team building: empathy, motivation, team spirit

• Leadership: sets example, energetic, vision,

delegates, positive attitude

• Coping: flexibility, creativity, patience, persistence

• Technical: experience, project knowledge

17

Knowledge areas required for a project

manager

• Scope Management

• Time Management

• Cost Management

• Risk Management

• Quality Management

• Human Resource Management

• Communications Management

• Procurement Management

• Integrated Management

1–18

19

Step 1: Select project

• Define project scope: Selecting Priority Projects

• Project selection can be a difficult process, especially

when there are a large number of potential projects

competing for scarce dollars.

• Some selection methods are highly intuitive; some very

political.

• Others try to add rigor through more scientific selection

processes.

20

Selection Criteria Matrix: Un-weighted Criteria

21

Project Agreement

• What: A written description that clearly communicates what the

project is (and is not)

• When: Ideally, at the beginning of a project. Also useful to develop

one for a project already started. Update it as needed.

• Why:

• Establish agreement between project team members and

stakeholders about what the project is (and is not)

• Build team member commitment – team should write the charter

together

• Foundation for project planning

• Helps in managing expectations

• Communicate project to others

22

Project Stakeholders

• Within the team

• Project manager

• Team members

• Within the organization

• Internal customers

• Project sponsor

• Senior managers

• Functional managers

• Outside the organization

• External customers

• Collaborating organizations

• Affected organizations

• Vendors

23

Project Agreement Development Meeting

• Allow 2 ½ hours to half day, depending on complexity or

project

• Recognize that the process and team involvement is as

important as document

• Ensure participation by all team members

• Use group techniques such as brainstorming and

consensus

• Do not let the project manager dominate the meeting

24

Managing the Triple Constraint: Set Priorities

• Need to discuss with customer and sponsor near startup

and agree on priority order.

• Example : Priority matrix

25

1 - Critical 2 - Major 3 – Minor

Time X

Cost X

Scope X

Step 2: Define project activities

• Work Breakdown Structure

• Prepare based on project scope, objectives, and/or deliverables

• Organizes and defines work to be done

• Divides work into logical, manageable segments

• Objective is to identify all project tasks that must be completed with

action verbs

26

27

28

29

Let’s practice

• Activity 2

• Activity 3

30