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EMBA Strategy Implementation

Project Management

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Project Management. EMBA Strategy Implementation. Overview. Morning Introduction to project management Work Breakdown Structure Building the Project Plan Implementing the Project Plan Exercise. What is a project?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Project Management

EMBAStrategy Implementation

Page 2: Project Management

• Morning• Introduction to project management• Work Breakdown Structure• Building the Project Plan• Implementing the Project Plan• Exercise

Page 3: Project Management

• A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to create a unique result• Projects have a beginning and end• A project has specific deliverables• Teams are usually disbanded at the end• Operations, in contrast, are repetitive and on-going

• Projects are an increasingly important means of executing strategy• So-called “strategic initiatives”• Project goals can be progressively elaborated over

time

Page 4: Project Management

• Project management is “the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to meet project requirements”.

• Now an IEEE Standard (IEEE1490)• Project Management Institute

• Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK)

• PM is seen in a broad context• Management of the team, risks, quality &

external stakeholders as well as cost and time

Page 5: Project Management

• Most projects are over time and over budget (often significantly)• On average only 25% of projects meet all of

their goals, around 25% fail completely• According to the CHAOS report the average

project in 2001 was:• 163% over time• 145% over budget

Page 6: Project Management

• PM can:• Justify work and changes• Improve tracking of critical variables• Identify tasks at differing levels of complexity• Decrease project costs• Let everyone know how they fit in• Improve client reporting• Decrease development time/costs and increase

productivity and reusability

“If you fail to plan then plan to fail”

Page 7: Project Management

Scope Time

Cost Quality/Risk

Page 8: Project Management

• Initiating

• Planning

• Executing

• Controlling

• Closing

Page 9: Project Management

• Project scope management• Defining and controlling what is, or is not,

included in the project deliverables

• Project charter• A written statement of project scope that is

formally agreed with stakeholders and shared with the team

Page 10: Project Management

• Problem/opportunity

• Project name, sponsor, manager

• Singular Project Goal

• Objectives that are Specific, Measurable, Assignable, Realistic, Time based (SMART)• Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)

• Success criteria

• Assumptions, risks, obstacles

Page 11: Project Management

• Scope Verification• A process should be defined for how the

stakeholder will formally accept that deliverables have been achieved

• Can verify at various stages or phases• Verification may be conditional

• Scope Change• A process should also be defined for how

scope can be adjusted and the resulting impacts on cost, time, and risk quantified.

Page 12: Project Management

• A WBS is a categorization and decomposition of project deliverables

• Work packages are the lowest level of the structure• They are the smallest deliverables

• 8-80 hours of work (1 day-2 weeks per person/team)• Can be further decomposed into activities or

tasks• The WBS is the input to all other project

plans• Work that is not in the WBS is not in the project !

Page 13: Project Management

• Ideally a team-based activity (offline with whiteboard)• Break the project into phases

• By lifecycle, milestones, or obligations

• Decompose the phases into discrete deliverables

• Decompose the deliverables into work packages using the 8-80 rule

• Must be able to assign time and resources• Create WBS diagram

Page 14: Project Management

 Screen clipping taken: 10/29/2007, 12:43 PM

  

Page 15: Project Management

 Screen clipping taken: 10/29/2007, 12:56 PM

  

Page 16: Project Management

• Next steps• Include milestones to mark end of each

phase• Convert WBS to OpenProj to create timeline

(see Donaldson example)• Present to project sponsor and key project

stakeholders• Get formal approval

Page 17: Project Management
Page 18: Project Management

• Begins with a lifecycle of major phases• I work the WBS in iterative cycles

• Start with high level activities• Add sub-activities

(note that activities are not really part of WBS)• Decompose as deeply as you need

• Down to one individual working 1-10 days• The lowest level should have one individual• A list of assignments and accountabilities• Let the team fill in low-level activities

• Length of time predicted from personal experience, historical data and team

Page 19: Project Management

• In your teams, create a WBS for the EMBA trip next year• Use OpenProj to determine how early the

planning needs to start if the trip must start no later than December 4, 2011

• OpenProj Skills• Enter phases, tasks, and durations• Link phases (create dependencies)• Set milestones• Determine start date

Page 20: Project Management

• By now, we have the project charter, scope, and WBS

• We need to add:• Schedule and cost estimates• Performance measurement baselines• Milestones and target dates• Required staff

• Extras• Risk, quality, staffing, communications

Page 21: Project Management

• Technically, the WBS contains only deliverables not activities

• The work packages need to be decomposed into activities (even sub-activities)

• Choo’s advice is useful – 1 person for 1 to 10 days

Page 22: Project Management

• Once the activities have been defined they need to be sequenced

Page 23: Project Management

• Constraints (see advanced tab)• Do what? Start/Finish • When? No earlier than/ No later than/ On

this date / As Soon as Possible /As Late as Possible

• Lead or Lag time is also possible• Double click on a link to set all sequence

information

Page 24: Project Management

• Once sequencing has been done, the duration required for each activity has to be estimated• Estimates based on experience/history• Time units –m, h, d, w, mo• Duration is the time required to complete an

activity or task

Page 25: Project Management

• By default, • One day equals 8 hours, one week equals 40

hours, and one month equals 20 working days. • 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. is the default work day.• Tools: Change Working Calendar

• Options…sets default working time• Ability to change default, add extra time, add non-

working time (e.g. holidays)• Change Gantt chart/entry table

• Add columns to WBS• Split screen display

Page 26: Project Management

• Duration = Work/Resource Units• If a resource’s workday is eight hours and he or she

is assigned to work on a task at 100% Units (for eight hours of work), then the Duration is eight hours (one day by default).

Now let’s say you change the Units to 50%. Then the Duration becomes 16 hours or two days, because if a person is working half of an eight-hour day on this task, then it will take them 16 hours (two days) to complete eight hours of work.

• Duration stays fixed for first work assignment • Recalculates after subsequent work assignments

Page 27: Project Management

• Working with units of time rather than specific dates allows more flexibility

• We have used Gantt charts, a project network diagram is an alternative way of representing a project.• Establishes the “critical path”• Contingency planning

• Allows the team to “tinker” with alternate dependencies and constraints

Page 28: Project Management

• The critical path is the longest duration from project start to finish• If any activity on the critical path is delayed the

project is going to be late• Slack is the limit an activity not on the

critical path can be delayed• Free slack – the time a single activity can be

delayed without delaying successors• Total slack – the time an activity can be delayed

without delaying the entire project• Project slack – the time the project can be

delayed before missing the customer deadline

Page 29: Project Management

• Fast tracking• Parallel rather than sequential (FS to SS)• Can add some lag to second task to create

a partial overlap• Can be risky if first task delayed

• Crashing• More resources – but not all tasks can be

shortened with more resources

Page 30: Project Management

• Always reflect the accurate amount of time it should take to complete a task• Don’t inflate time to allow for mistakes, rework,

and late activities• Parkinson’s law – work will expand to fill the

time available

• A management reserve is an artificial task at the end of a project• 10-15% of total time• Overruns are applied to the reserve

Page 31: Project Management

• A resource is defined as any people, equipment, or materials• View Resource Breakdown Schedule

• Key variables• Type – work (per hour), material (per unit), or

cost (per activity) • Max Units: 50% or 3 engineers• Rates –per time period (m, d, mo, y) or per use• Double click for resource information

• Flexible availability, costs, calendar• Accrual methods – start, prorated, end

Page 32: Project Management

• Insights• Includes 12-15% variance for unknowns• Assessing time required and assigning

resources with no slack (or over-allocation) are the toughest tasks

• Consult team members so you don’t create a schedule you can’t deliver

• Don’t be too generous though

• On going deliverables and communication with client can make a difficult project easier

Page 33: Project Management

• Take your WBS from the first exercise and convert it to a project schedule by adding activities using the 8-80 rule• Assign resources

• Keong, Dean Jarley, Lisa, Travel Agent, Other Internal & External Parties

• Find the critical path and then try shortening• What risks does this entail?

Page 34: Project Management

• Team has to be motivated and monitored• Project status meetings (usually weekly)

• Reporting – compare to baseline, • Generating a sense of responsibility &

ownership (peer pressure helps the former)• Acknowledgements and thank yous• Review of status and risks• Remediation (if necessary)

Page 35: Project Management

• Tools to track include:• E-mail, spreadsheets, web forms, OpenProj,

Projects on Demand (cloud-based)

• Each report should include costs and % of total work completed• If work is getting off schedule

• Add additional resources• Invoke the management reserve (reduce the

reserve and add time to late task)• Reassign the work unit

Page 36: Project Management

Term Definition Sample Value

Budget at Completion (BAC) Estimated total cost of project $100,000

Percent actual complete (%A) Actual reported amount of work completed

20%

Percent planned complete (%P) Planned proportion of work that should have been completed

25%

Earned Value (EV) %A x BAC $20,000

Planned Value (PV) %P x BAC $25,000

Actual Costs (AC) Funds actually expended $15,000

Page 37: Project Management

Term Definition Sample Value

Cost Variance EV-AC +$5000

Schedule Variance EV-PV -$5000

Cost performance index (CPI) EV/AC 20/15 = 1.33

Schedule performance index (SPI) EV/PV 20/25=0.8

Estimate at completion (EAC) BAC/CPI 100/1.33=75.19

Estimated time Total Est time/SPI 6 mths/.8=7.5mths

Page 38: Project Management

• Lack of supervision is fatal• Coming in on time and budget is bloody

difficult• Try using dynamic digital dashboards for

feedback (especially when team is dispersed)• Throttle resources up and down as needed• Ongoing reward and recognition• Communication and feedback is the key• Learn from lessons learned – after action

Page 39: Project Management

• In your teams, complete• the POM+ Project, or• Blue Zuma for more of a challenge

• If you finish early…• help others • compare your answers!