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Initiating
IDENTIFY PROJECT PURPOSE
editKey Points
edit- identify business objective i.e. stated goal of the project
- define the opportunity/problem
Goal
edit- desired end result
- often synonymous with objective
- may be a high-level objective that has less-than-complete definition
Objective
edit- something to be achieved
- desired outcomes of the project or any part of the project
- measued in in terms of concrete deliverables and behavioral outcomes
- it has to be visualisez before
EVALUATE BUSINESS JUSTIFICATION
editKey Points
edit- Identify high-level business-related requirements, outcomes, and criteria for success
- identify low-level needs and expectations
- establish boundaries for project budget, duration, and risk
Triple Constraints
edit- scope
- schedule
- budget
Business Case
edit- the information that describes the justification for the project
- project is justified if expected benefits outweigh estimated costs and risks
- often complex
- may require
- Financial Analysis
- technical analysis
- organization impact analysis
- feasibility study
Request for Proposal (RFP) AKA Request for Quote (RFQ).
edit- describes
- need for products and/or services
- conditions under which product/services are to be provided
- purpose
- solicit bids or proposals from prospective suppliers
IDENTIFY MAJOR STAKEHOLDERS & THEIR ROLES
editProject Manager
edit- key stakeholder
- responsible and accountable for managing a project's planning and performance
- single point of accountability for a project
Customer or Client
edit- key stakeholder
- person or organization that is the principle beneficiary of the project
- Generally has a significant authority regarding
- scope definition
- whether the project should be initiated and/or continued.
Performing Organization
edit- key stakeholder
- company or group doing the work
Sponsor
edit- key stakeholder
- builds and maintains executive commitment
- allocates organization resources (capital, human, etc.)
- provides direction
- has authority to settle disputes between project staff & functional staff
Champion
edit- senior exec who promotes and defends the project
Project Steering Committee
edit- execs from functional areas that provide
- guidance
- strategic input and direction
- enlist cooperation from their functional group
- high level project approval
Project Team (decide later? In planning phase?)
edit- anybody who is doing work on the project
- includes contractors and consultants
Authority
edit- ability to get other people to act based on your decisions
- based on perception that a person has been officially empowered to issue binding orders
Power
edit- ability to influence the actions of others
- may come from
- formal delegation of authority
- charter gives PM this
- reference power
- personality
- subject matter expertise
- respect earned from skills
- ability to influence rewards and penalties
- rewarded or coercive authority
- other sources.
- formal delegation of authority
Stakeholder
edit- anybody and everybody with a stake in the project
- clients
- sponsors
- performers
- general public
- family and friends of direct participants
- others?
Managerial Structures
edit- functional
- project
- matrix
Matrix Organization
edit- business structure in which people are assigned to
- functional group
- departments, disciplines, etc
- projects or processes
- cut across the organization
- require resources from multiple functional groups.
- functional group
DEFINE THE SCOPE OR THE PROJECT
editScope Components
edit- function
- performance
Five (scope?) Constants
edit- project end date
- project ownership
- completion criteria
- rigorous change control procedure
- "best practices" life cycle for this type of project
Statement of Scope AKA Statement of Work (SOW)
edit- description of the scope of a project
- centered on the major deliverables and constraints
- develops and confirms an understanding of project scope
- typically requires more time to create than WBS or charter
- review of the scope documents held before proceeding to project planning phase
- complete after the PM and the sponsor agree that objectives will be met
- establishes procedure to request changes to a project scope
- end-users representative approves technical changes
SOW-PROCS (mnemonic)
edit- (P) - Policies and Procedures
- (R) - Requirements
- (O) - Overview
- (C) - Criteria for Vendor Purchase
- (S) - Specifications
Scope: three dimensions
edit- product
- full set of features and functions
- project
- work that has to be done to deliver the product
- impact
- involvement by performing and client organizations.
- effect on performing and client organizations.
Scope Change
edit- any change in the definition of the project scope
- can result from:
- changes in client needs
- discovery of defects or omissions
- regulatory changes
- other
Scope Change Control AKA Scope Change Management
edit- process of making sure that changes to the scope are consciously evaluated
- making sure that implications are considered in making a decision to
- make the change
- postpone it
- reject it
Scope Creep
edit- changes in scope over the life of a project
- unconscious growth of the project scope
- results from uncontrolled changes to requirements
- managed by implementing a rigid change control process
Scope Definition
edit- breaks down major deliverables into more manageable components
- makes verification, development, and project control, easier
- may be part of requirements definition and/or design
Scope Planning
edit- development of a statement of project's
- principle deliverables
- justification (business case)
- objectives
- part of requirements definition
Scope Verification
edit- process to ensure that all project deliverables have been completed satisfactorily
- associated with acceptance of the product by clients and sponsors.
BUILD CONSENSUS AND OBTAIN WRITTEN APPROVAL (objectives)
editSecure Written Confirmation Of
edit- customer expectations
- problem/opportunity
- deliverables
- strategy
- completion date
- Budget
- risks
- priority
- sponsor
- resources
- resources availability
- all the above documented in the charter?
Methods to build consensus
edit- negotiating
- interviewing
- meetings
- memos
Strategies To build And Maintain Senior Management Support
edit- involve mgmt in defining project concept
- involve mgmt in defining scope
- involve mgmt in reviewing and approving deliverables
- provide role for mgmt as spokesperson/advocate
Consensus
edit- unanimous agreement among the decision-makers
- requires conviction that the decision will adequately achieve objectives
- if one person is not in agreement then there is no consensus
Planning
REQUIREMENTS ANALYSIS
editRequirements analysis is the phase of the project where the requirements of a project are carefully defined. A requirement is a documented need or a description of what a system must accomplish. It is a statement that identifies a necessary attribute, capability, characteristic, or quality of the product of a project.
Product
editThe project's material outcome is its product. The product may be a service, event or a material object. It includes all necessary aspects of the deliverable including training, documentation, etc. Requirements focus on the product itself rather than the ways of achieving the product, leaving the implementation details for later. Requirements that focus on how the product is achieved are said to have implementation bias.
Requirements Statement
editA requirements statement is a detailed accounting of project objectives. It describes the features, functions and performance constraints of the product. It provide the basis for accepting the product, or describes what must be accomplished for the product to be accepted.
The following are some useful techniques to understand user requirements:
- Prototyping
- Pilot
- Use Case Modeling
- describes relationship of a software product and its environment
- JAD (Joint Application Design)
- UML (Unified Modeling Language)
- management tool for object oriented software design
Project Description Document
editThe Project Description Document and the Project Requirements are used to identify:
- the high-level value of the project to the sponsor and users
- gaps in the requirements when compared to the project scope
- whether the list of requirements is complete and valid enough to move on to next phase
Project Requirements Document - OTN
edit- all system inputs are defined
- all system outputs are defined
- requirements are validated with sponsors and users
- business rules, special logic, and calculations are defined
- gaps between the requirements and the scope are identified and filled
Requirement Characteristics
edit- necessary range of inputs
- carefully evaluated to be within the project scope
- complete, accurate, and valid
Types Of Requirements
edit- business
- functional
- technical
Traceability
edit- track a requirement to documented need
Configuration Management
edit- ensure descriptions of projects products are correct and complete
- document physical and functional design characteristics
REFINE SCOPE
edit- Scope statement will be included in the project plan
- Scope of a project is usually defined during the initiation phase of a project but the scope can change as needed as more analysis is done
WBS (work breakdown structure)
editWBS key concepts
edit- hierarchical task list
- decomposition of project into a collection of work units
- use to determine the project work effort
- basis for planning, schedule, budget
- used to estimate resource requirements, activity durations, and costs
- required to create a Gantt chart
- will be included in the project plan statement
- Phase = highest level element of the WBS
- Work Package = lowest level element of the WBS
- one person responsible for each item, although many may work on that item
- formal approval should be obtained for each deliverable
- authority to sign off should be clearly defined
- depicted as
- tree diagram (or hierarchy chart)
- list in outline form with detailed items subordinated to higher-level items.
- schedule and budget contained in WBS?
Activity or Task
edit- may be of any size (a project is a very large activity or task)
- sometimes the terms are synonymous
- sometimes the terms are used to denote a piece of work at a particular level in WBS
- e.g. a phase is broken into activities, and an activity into tasks
- defined in each activity or task
- duration
- cost
- resources
- deliverables
SMART: activities or tasks should be
edit- Specific
- Measurable
- Assignable
- Realistic
- Time-framed
Phase
edit- highest level element of the WBS
- grouping of activities in a project
- meets a major milestone by providing a significant deliverable
- e.g. requirements definition or product design document
- a project is broken down into a set of phases for control purposes
- phase is usually the highest level of breakdown of a project in the WBS.
Work Package
edit- lowest level of the WBS at which project accounting is performed
- usually a week or so in duration and performed by an individual or small work group
"Work Package" v "Task" v "Work Unit" v "Activity"
edit- "task" or "work unit" or "activity" = all ambiguous
- task could be high level, mid-level, or low level, i.e. summary task, sub-task
- work package lowest level for which accounting is performed - unambiguous
best practices
edit- keep work unit duration as short as possible
- work teams should be small
hierarchy format e.g.
edit- 1.0 Main task 1
- 1.1 Subtask 1
- 1.2. Subtask 2
- 2.0 Main task 2
- 3.0 Main task 3
Deliverable
edit- any item produced as the outcome of a project or any part of a project
- project deliverable is differentiated from interim deliverables
- interim deliverables result from activities within the project
- deliverable must be tangible and verifiable
- every element of the WBS (activity or task) must have one or more deliverables.
BUILD TEAM
editIssues
edit- Contract Labor
- Outsourcing
Recruit The Best Candidates
edit- ask mainly open questions
- develop the interview questions
- develop a mechanism to score responses
- develop a comprehensive job specification
- identify skills, knowledge, and attitudes required for the position
Attributes To Look For In A Candidate
edit- a positive, team-player attitude
- a goal oriented, Can do disposition
- a knowledge of systems and user documentation
Resource Capabilities And Resource Availability
edit- have the greatest impact on the actual duration of project tasks
- have the greatest impact on the estimated per unit labor cost
RESPONSIBILITY ASSIGNMENT MATRIX
editMaps Work To People
editAuthority Structure?
editESTIMATION TECHNIQUES
editTop Down
edit- estimate effort/cost/duration/risk of project or phase
- looking at the project as a whole
- comparing project to previously performed similar projects
- methods of comparison
- analogous estimating
- direct comparison
- parametric estimating
- using an algorithm
- experts
- estimating from memory
ROM (Rough Order of Magnitude)
edit- estimate effort/cost/duration/risk of project or phase
- done early in a projects to get a ball park figure
- about the same as top down.
Parametric
edit- estimate effort/cost/duration or project or phase
- using an algorithm
- parameters that represent attributes of the project used to calculate
- used in top-down estimating.
Analogous
edit- estimate effort/cost/duration/risk of project or phase
- estimating using similar projects or activities as a basis for determining
- used in top-down estimating
Bottom Up
edit- estimate effort/cost/duration or project or phase
- breaking down into activities, tasks and sub-tasks
- estimating the effort, duration and cost of each task and sub-task
- combine all component estimates to determine the full estimate
- determining duration through a bottom-up approach requires
- sequencing and resource leveling to be done as part of the scheduling process.
Cost and Time Estimating Issues
edit- scope
- task requirements
- resource availability
- resource expense
- original estimations vs actuals
FTE = Full Time Equivalent
editSCHEDULE
editProcess For Creating Schedule
edit- estimate time and resources for each work unit
- historical data
- expert judgment
- determine dependencies between work units
- level the resources
- create checklists for each work unit
- understand dependency relations between work units
- FF, SS, FS, SF
Five Lists Required To Generate Schedule
edit- deliverables
- project tasks
- required skills
- available skills
- time and resources per task
Items Needed To Justify The Schedule
edit- the project critical path
- actions you have taken
- the tasks with time requirements
Sequencing Tasks
edit- part of the scheduling process
- tasks are positioned serially or parallel based on dependencies between them
- sequencing results in a task network.
Dependencies: Types Of
edit- mandatory
- inherent in the nature of the work
- often involve physical limitations
- hard logic
- discretionary
- defined by project management team
- soft logic
- external
- relationship between project and non-project activities
Milestones
edit- points in time when a deliverable or set of deliverables is available
- denote a significant event such as the completion of a phase
- SMART criteria = Specific, Measurable, Assignable, Realistic, Time-framed
- on gantt chart represented by black diamonds
- on tracking gantt chart, slipped milestones represented by white diamond
- an event: no duration or effort
- must be preceded by one or more tasks
- even the beginning of a project is preceded by a set of tasks, may be implied
Critical Path
edit- path(s) in a project network that has the longest duration
- series of activities that determines the earliest completion of the project
- may be more than one critical path
- critical path(s) may change during the project.
Float Or Slack
edit- amount of time available for a task to slip before it delays the project end date
- It is the difference between the task's early and late start dates.
Lead
edit- minimum lapse of time between start of activity and start of overlapping activity
Lag
edit- waiting time between two tasks
Gantt Chart
edit- bar chart that depicts a schedule of activities and milestones
- activities are listed along the left side of the chart
- time line is listed along the top or bottom of the chart
- activities are shown as horizontal bars
- length of activity bars are equivalent to the duration of the activity
- may be annotated with dependency relationships and other schedule-related information.
Network Diagram
edit- graphic tool for depicting the sequence and relationships between tasks
- forms of network diagrams
- PERT Diagram
- Critical Path Diagram
- Arrow Diagram
- Precedence Diagram
Pert (Program Evaluation And Review Technique)
edit- scheduling technique that makes use of
- dependency analysis and critical path to determine the duration of a project
- slack to determine priorities of tasks
- task durations are computed as (Optimistic + 4x Most likely + Pessimistic estimates) / 6)
Schedule
edit- project time-line
- identifies dates (absolute or relative to a start date) that
- project tasks will be started and completed
- resources will be required
- milestones will be reached.
Sequencing Tasks
edit- tasks are positioned serially or parallel based on dependencies between them
- sequencing results in a task network.
BUDGET
editProcess For Creating - Bottom Up
edit- determine cost of resources for each work unit
- determine when those resources will be required
- should have written approval from the project sponsor
Uses For Top Down Budget
edit- confirm the customer's expected cost
- validate detailed (bottom-up) budget when it is created
Budget Baseline
edit- need budget and schedule to develop
- show when the budget for each work unit will be spent
- basis for budgets cash flow
- basis for PV (BCWS) and EV (BCWP) (new terms?)
Management Reserve
edit- funding for price changes that occur over the project life cycle due to -inflation- ?
Cost Budgeting
edit- allocate cost estimates over time
- four inputs to cost budgeting
- cost estimates
- WBS
- project schedule
- risk management plan
- one output from cost budgeting
- cost baseline
- time phased budget
- cost baseline
Fully Loaded Amounts For Hr Include
edit- compensation
- benefits
- overtime
- etc
COMMUNICATIONS PLAN
editCommunication Policies
edit- There should be no arguments in front of the customer
- Consultants should not discuss other clients while on-site
Communications Plan Should Include Communication:
edit- purpose
- senders
- recipients
- frequency
- type
- method
- description
Information Needs Of End-User Management
edit- main systems functionality
- user involvement requirements
- main deliverables planned delivery times
QUALITY PLAN
editQuality Plan
edit- create operation definitions for performance, and reliability
Project Review Process
edit- provides a quality assurance measure for project performance
- provides an independent evaluation of project performance/documentation
Quality Testing (Types Of)
edit- unit test
- component level
- integration test
- functionally grouped components
- system test
- the entire system as one entity
- user acceptance test
- should prove that the system operates to the specified requirements.
- verification
- alpha testing
- simulated environment and simulated data
- validation
- beta testing
- live environment and real data
- audit testing
- certifies system is ready for operation
Quality Checkpoints
editQuality Assurance (QA)
edit- making sure standards and procedures are effective and complied with
- in some organizations QA is used to refer to the quality control function
- satisfy standards
- promote continual improvements
Quality Control (QC)
edit- making sure deliverables comply with acceptance criteria
- includes testing and reviews.
RISK MANAGEMENT PLAN
editRisk
edit- likelihood of the occurrence of an event
- generally, the event is a negative one like project failure
- event may also be a positive event, like the early completion of a task
- price for opportunity
Risk Categories
edit- technology risk
- schedule risk
- program evaluation and review technique (PERT)
- Monte Carlo
- financial risk
Choices To Handle Risk
edit- accept
- avoid
- mitigate
Qualitative Risk Analysis
edit- assess likelihood and impact of identified risks
Identify Potential Risks
edit- historical information
- nature of product and project
- information gathering
Risk Assessment
edit- part of risk management
- planners identify potential risks and describe them
- risks usually identified in terms of
- symptoms
- causes
- probability of occurrence
- potential impact
Risk Response
edit- action that can be taken to address the occurrence of a risk event
- Contingency Plans are collections of risk responses
Risk Response Control
edit- responding to risk event occurrences throughout the project life cycle
- taking corrective action is an aspect of risk response control
Risk Response Development
edit- part of risk management
- planners identify and define actions to be taken in case a risk occurs
- such risk may be positive or negative
Six Processes Within The Area Of Risk Management:
edit- Risk Management Planning
- Risk Identification
- Qualitative Risk Analysis
- Quantitative Risk Analysis
- Risk Response Planning
- Risk Monitoring and Control
PROJECT PLAN
editProject Plan – Key Concepts
edit- other documents, such as WBS and SOW are fed into the project plan
- very detailed and contains all the information about the project
- a living document in that its contents can change over the life of the project
- needs to be base-lined and all changes tracked
- closes out the planning phase
Project Plan - Methods For Generating Support For
edit- requesting input from stakeholders during planning process
- clearly illustrating how the project relates to the company's objectives
Project Plan - Included In Project Plan
edit- project scope
- project definition
- project objectives
- project scope analysis (inclusion and exclusions)
- project deliverables
- project assumptions
- project success criteria
- project requirements
- methodology description
- project approach
- work breakdown structure (WBS)
- project estimates
- project risk assessments
- project resources (skills set needed, etc)
Project Plan : PP-TOSTR-SEE-BIST (mnemonic)
edit- (T) - Table of Contents
- (O) - Overview
- (S) - Sponsors
- (T) - Team Members
- (R)- Requirements
- (S) - Scheduled Tasks (WBS)
- (E) - Expected Resources
- (E) - Environmental Issues
- (B) - Business Requirements
- (I) - Implementation Plans
- (S) - Support Plans
- (T) - Training Plans - Nine Knowledge Areas, each = report, except integration (dummies pmp)
- Integration
- Scope
- Time
- Cost
- Quality
- Human Resources
- Communication
- Procurement
- Risk
- mnemonic: Rapper Ice-T seeks the HR department to take a CPR class
- Ice-T - IST - integration, scope, time
- seeks HR - CQ HR - cost, quality, HR
- CPR - communication, procurement, risk
- mnemonic: Rapper Ice-T seeks the HR department to take a CPR class
Project Plan - Steps To Creating A Project Plan
edit- assemble all project planning elements
- create an outline or table of contents
- review outline with key stakeholders
- adjust the plan according stakeholder feedback
- write the comprehensive project plan
- obtain formal approval
Executing
KICK OFF MEETING
edit- meet with sponsor to review the output
- a meeting at the beginning of the project or major phase of the project
- align peoples' understanding of project objectives, procedures, and plans
- begin the team-building and bonding process.
WEEKLY TASKS
edit- check scope
- check evolution and status deliverables
- check schedule
- analyze variances, compare estimates to actuals
- handle scope changes
- list, track, try to resolve open issues
- report project status
- push for activity close-out and deliverable sign-off
- decide if it's necessary to kill project
EVM (Earned Value Management)
editEVM (Earned Value Management)
edit- a method for integrating scope, schedule and resources
- used for measuring project performance
- compares
- amount of work that was planned (PV)
- what was actually earned (EV)
- what was actually spent (AC)
- determines if cost and schedule performance are as planned.
EVA (Earned Value Analysis)
edit- most commonly used method of performance measurement
- integrates scope, cost and schedule measures
- assesses project performance
- used to identify any divergence from planned outcomes
EV (Earned Value)
edit- EV = PV * % complete (from course prep)
- formerly BCWP (Budgeted Cost Work Performed)
- value of work actually completed
PV (Planned Value)
edit- formerly BCWS (Budgeted Cost Work Scheduled)
- portion of approved cost estimate planned to be spent on activity during given period.
- physical work scheduled to be performed
AC (Actual Cost)
edit- formerly ACWP (Actual Cost Work Performed)
- total costs incurred in accomplishing work during given period.
- occurred to accomplish earned value
BAC (Budget at Completion)
edit- the original total budget allocated to a project.
- sum of all budgets allocated to a project
EAC (Estimate at Completion)
edit- 3 formulas to calculate EAC
- EAC = AC + ETC
- EAC = AC + BAC - EV (variances are atypical)
- EAC = BAC/CPI (from course prep) (variances are expected to occur again at same rate).
- value expressed as either dollars or hours
- represents the projected final costs of work when completed
- actual costs incurred plus estimated cost of remaining work.
CPI (Cost Performance Index)
edit- CPI=EV/AC
- ratio of worth to cost
- measure of cost-efficiency or efficiency of the budget
- CPI < 1.0 means that the task is over budget
CV (Cost Variance)
edit- CV=EV-AC
- difference between worth and cost of completed work
- identifies the area where spending more than budgeted
- CV < 0 means the task is over budget
ETC (Estimate to Complete)
edit- ETC=BAC-EV
- expected additional cost needed to complete an activity or project
SV (Schedule Variance)
edit- SV=EV-PV
- difference between worth and supposed-to-be worth of completed work
- identify schedule problems
- measure of schedule efficiency
- SV < 0 means the task is behind schedule
SPI (Schedule Performance Index)
edit- SPI=EV/PV
- schedule efficiency ratio of earned value accomplished against the planned value
- describes what portion of the planned schedule was actually accomplished.
- SPI < 1.0 means the task is behind schedule
TCPI (To Complete Performance Index)
edit- Two possible formula:
TCPI = (BAC – EV)/(BAC – AC); based on BAC (original BAC only money available)
TCPI = (BAC – EV)/(EAC – AC); based on EAC (new revised EAC approved)
- ratio of remaining work to remaining budget
- efficiency that must be achieved to complete remaining work with remaining money
- TCPI>1 = must increase performance to stay within budget
CAPS (Control Account Plans)
edit- management control unit in which earned value performance measurement takes place
- formerly called Cost Account Plan
- EVM CAPs continuously measure project performance by relating 3 independent variables
- Planned Value
- Earned Value
- Actual Costs
Formulas Summary:
edit- CV=EV-AC
- EAC (Estimate at Completion):
- EAC = AC + ETC
- EAC = AC + BAC - EV
- EAC = BAC/CPI (from course prep)
- CPI=EV/AC
- SV=EV-PV
- SPI=EV/PV
- TCPI=(BAC-EV)/(BAC-AC)
- Funds Remaining (BAC or EAC - AC)
- EV=PV*%complete (from course prep)
Formula Mnemonics For Basic Formulas (CV,SV,CPI,SPI)
edit- "V" in left-most means variance which means subtract
- "I" in left-most means index which means divide
- "EV" on left side of equation after "="
- if cost "AC" is right-most, otherwise "PV"
- CV=EV-AC
- SV=EV-PV
- CPI=EV/AC
- SPI=EV/PV
Formula Mnemonics For TCPI
edit- Two possible formula:
TCPI = (BAC – EV)/(BAC – AC); BAC based
TCPI = (BAC – EV)/(EAC – AC); EAC based
- remember both num and denom start with BAC-
- no PV
- "I" in left-most means index which means divide
- "EV" on left side of equation after "="
- baseline
- original project plan plus approved changes. Must have to use EVA.
CHANGE CONTROL
editUse The Established Procedures Outlined In The Statement Of Work
editTwo Methods Used To Monitor Scope Changes
edit- track number of scope changes
- track dollar value of extra work performed
Before Approval From The Stakeholders On A Project Scope Modification
edit- analyze budget issues and their impact on "common problems"
- analyze project plan issues and their impact
- research alternatives for the proposed scope change
Value Engineering
edit- used to evaluate proposed changes
When Change Occurs, PMS Must
edit- identify cause
- write a status report to document change
- determine how scope change will impact cost and/or schedule
- quantify alternative solutions
- ask users to distinguish between mandatory and optional scope changes
- determine whether to inform the sponsor
- gain stakeholder approval
Objectives Of Change Control Process
edit- insure that changes are beneficial
- know when change has occurred
- manage changes as they occur
Preventing Scope Creep
edit- scope is well documented and verified in the planning phase
- team well informed of products and quality procedures
- develop and follow a requirements management process
LARGE & MULTI-LOCATION PROJECT STRATEGIES
editWhat May Be Needed
edit- communication standards
- work standards
- sub-teams
- focus on milestones
TEAM MANAGEMENT
editBest Practices
edit- Shared Challenge
- Team Identity
- Balanced Task Assignment
- Team Support
- Trust Your Team
- Earn Respect
- Be a Team Player
- Leadership Principles
Conflict Handling Modes
edit- confrontation mode
- problem solving approach
- allows parties to work through their differences
- usually most effective
- smoothing mode
- de-emphasize areas of differences
- emphasize areas of agreement
- often used when personalities clash
- forcing mode
- win-lose approach
- favored by the autocratic
- withdrawal mode
- little gets accomplished
Task Related Conflict
edit- often healthy
- different approaches to create deliverables discussed
- better solutions can be achieved
Emotional Conflicts
edit- develop group ground rules to avoid
Common Causes Of Performance Problems Include
edit- team is unfocused or pulling in different directions
- team is fragmented into special interest or social groups
EXECUTIVE SUPPORT
editRe-enforce by
edit- identify source of doubts
- use interpersonal skills
- act without creating negative impact
- use allies and influence
RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
editIssues
edit- Contract Labor
- Outsourcing
- Material Resources and Suppliers
- Resource Leveling
PROJECT DELAYS
editIssues Related To Extending Schedule
edit- impact on other project goals
- impact on the rest of the organization
- impact on the project team
- impact on the vendors
INTERIM PROJECT REQUIREMENT REVIEWS
editINTERIM PROJECT REQUIREMENT REVIEWS - Process
edit- held with the sponsors and users
- held after the initial requirements are completed
- held after requested changes to the scope are defined
- most reviews are face-to-face with affected stakeholders
- may be held on a periodic basis or as needed
- Reasons To Hold Non-Periodic Reviews
- organizational changes
- misunderstandings arise
- quality problems
- budget problems
INTERIM PROJECT REQUIREMENT REVIEWS - Reasons for
edit- provides a quality assurance measure for project performance
- provides an independent evaluation of project performance/documentation
- examines the overall health of the project
- recommends actions to address any significant problems
- Emphasize Important Project Goals
- main goals understood?
- are products being delivered on time?
- quality okay?
- budget okay?
INTERIM PROJECT REQUIREMENT REVIEWS - Acceptable Outcomes
edit- approve requirements list as is
- agree on revisions then resubmit for review and approval
- agree on revisions then move forward with the planning phase
TURNOVER PHASE
editTransition Work
edit- user docs
- user training
- help-desk training
REFERENCES
edit- A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (fifth ed.), Project Management Institute, 2013, ISBN 978-1-935589-67-9
- Earned Value Analysis in Project Management — an Easy Cheat Sheet
Closing
Project Close Out Phase
editClosing
edit- process of gaining formal acceptance for the results of a project or phase.
- bringing project or phase to an orderly end.
- archiving of project information and post-project review.
Output
edit- project archives
- formal acceptance documentation
- project review
- team member evaluations
- lessons learned report = last deliverable
Formal Acceptance Of The Project By The Customers
edit- first step in close out phase
- a goals of the close out phase?
- formal acceptance documentation should be prepared
- PM should document customer acceptance
Project Review
edit- necessary task in preparation of the Close Out phase
- asses and evaluate each phases of the project
- asses and evaluate the overall project performance
- a way to learn from the experience and continuously improve project performance
Project Archives
edit- leave clear and complete documentation of the project
Ongoing Maintenance Should Be Discussed In A Project Close Out Meeting
editExecutive Sponsor Is Responsible For Authorizing Closure Of The Project
editAll Contract Files Must Be Closed Out
editLessons Learned Report
edit- PM may need to study from previous projects
Project Audit
edit- formal review of project progress and results
- did project achieve benefits as planned
- was work accomplished according to plan