Project Management SID NO: 1031425/1
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents Page No
Table of contents 1
Purpose of Study 2
1.0 Introduction 3 - 4
2.0 Objectives 5
3.0 Safe Guard Controls 6 – 8
4.0 Interdependency Management Process 8 - 10
5.0 Scope Related Process 11 - 13
6.0 Time Related Process 14 - 17
7.0 Cost Related Process 18 - 19
8.0 Resource Related Process 19 - 20
9.0 Personnel Related Process 20 - 21
10.0 Communication 21-22
11.0 Risk Related Issues 22
12.0 Learning from the project 23
13.0 Opinion Forming 24
14.0 Project Planning 25
15.0 Progress Management 26
16.0 Budget Creation 27
17.0 Conclusion 28
Bibliography/Referencing 29
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Purpose of the study
The purpose of the Project management Audit was to identify and provide practical
solutions and advice regarding the CCP project management issues. The
recommendations made in this report are tailored to provide guidance for the Cleveland
callback 2010 project as it progresses and to help a series of domestic house owners’
deal with the fires that took place during April 2010.
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1.0 Introduction
A project can be described as a temporary effort to create a unique product or service
which has a definite beginning and a definite end. Projects include some degree of
uniqueness and objectivity, while involving constraints or deliverables known as Scope,
Time and Cost referred as the triple constraint.
“A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to create a unique product, service, or
result” (PMI, 2000).
Projects may have certain characteristics that may include:
Uniqueness of the project
Projects are of a temporary timeframe
Projects have a beginning and an end
Projects that are successful meet the satisfaction of the stakeholders.
Stakeholders are person(s) who invested interest and possess influence towards the
successful project.
Projects must be planned, involve some degree of decision making, monitored and
controlled. Projects therefore, should be managed.
Project Management involves the application of knowledge, practices, principles, tools
and techniques, to lead and control the scope, time, cost and risks of the project.
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An example of the Triple Constraint (Stiffler 2009)
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2.0 Objectives
Projects, as mentioned above, contains objectives, The Cleveland Callback Project
2010 stated that their objectives were as follows:
To identify the household within the United Kingdom that had been upgraded by
xxx limited.
Contact all upgraded household by letter giving explanation towards the control
unit.
Introducing a temporary call centre in response to the letter.
Organize visits from Fire Prevention Officers and replace faulty control units.
The Cleveland Callback Project (CCP) is not in accordance with planned projects in
respect that, the objectives does not include any responsibility and ownership defined.
The Introduction, to any sort of cost and time is not mentioned, resulting in
incompleteness of objectives and a disastrous start.
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3.0 Safeguards and Controls
Project Characteristics
In the Cleveland Callback Project (CCP), primarily established a Matrix structure which
is defined as a group of people with similar skills pooled together to apportioned work.
The Fire Prevention Authority (FPA) department was defined as the owner of the
project, whereby, the head of the FPA was nominated project director who dedicated
very little time on the project. The project was not clearly defined into processes, phases
or related tasks. The CCP had poor Project management resulting in longer time in
completion, absenteeism for contingency planning, high risk occurrence and weak
conflict resolutions. The project should have at least developed some degree of
management phases for instance, the 4-D Model Project Management Phases
(Maylor 3rd edition, p.28) which comprises of:
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Phase Key Issues Fundamental Questions
Define the project Project and organizational
Strategy, goal definition
What is to be done?
Why is it to be done?
Design the project Modeling and planning,
estimating,resource,analysis
and justification
How will it be done?
Who will be involved?
When can it start and
finish?
Deliver the project Control,leadership,decision-
making and problem solving
How should the project be
managed on a day-to-day
basis?
Develop the process Assessment of process,outcomes,changes for the future
How can the process be
continually improved?
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Quality in Project Management Processes
The CCP had no fundamental planning with respect to scope, time and cost which
resulted in poor quality project management. This illustrates that the project was not
being managed efficiently and effectively.
Strategic Processes
The CCP did not construct any sort of planning documents, the project director had not
accomplish any form of charter documents, baseline plan or work breakdown structure,
therefore the stakeholders in the project did not distinguish any status of the project until
the project was in devastation. Presently, a project manager was not in existence which
allowed lack of authority and responsibility for managing the project.
4.0 Interdependency Management Process
General
The Project is presently being managed by the head of the Fire Prevention Authority
known as the Project Director. The project director possesses little skills and knowledge
about project management. The stakeholders also ignored their responsibility which
greatly assisted to a damaging impact on the project
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Interaction Management
The interaction associated with the CCP was seldom and altered attendance was
present. The first meeting occurred approximately one month later than the start date
which was 4th May 2010, which was attended by the IT support manager, the result of
the first meeting led into an extension in the weekly working hours of the Information
consultants from a forty hour week into a sixty hour week. However, the project director
felt no need to panic and displayed lack of control to this extension; therefore the
second meeting was then held on the 6th August in which the director of information
management attended which led to another time extension. This point of the project, the
Stakeholders was getting more involved due to their unsatisfaction to the CCP. Risk
management teams and higher degree of project communication should have been
implemented with immediate effect.
Change Management
The CCP needed to implement change with immediate effect with regards to managing
the project. It was understood and expected without planning the project would be
scattered, continually being extended in time and cost rather than organized. Due to the
dissatisfaction of the stakeholders, after numerous changes in the go –live date and
additional unexpected cost incurred, the director of the Fire Prevention Authority hired a
project manager to conduct the project.
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The Project manager is responsible for planning, organizing, budgeting, directing, and
controlling the project with some background knowledge and standard for example The
Project Management Body of Knowledge(PMBOK), or Projects In Controlled
Environment(PRINCE2) to manage the project successfully. The project manager must
also meet the stakeholder’s expectations. The project manager requested the project
plan in the CCP from the project director which was not even created at this late stage
in the project. Therefore, the Project manager had to implement tools and techniques
such as Work breakdown structures and critical path analysis.
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5.0 Scope Related Process
General
The Cleveland Callback Project (CCP) scope was to upgrade all household with faulty
control units using an Information Technology approach to source and configure all data
relating to the persons affected with defective control units.
Scope Development and Control
The CCP had a general scope in what they wanted to be done but no formal processes
were established to ensure the project was operating successfully. The project director
did not even establish any contingency plans towards the CCP resulting in unexpected
changes and further complexity.
Project Scope Management allows processes required to ensure that the project
includes only work required for a successful project.
Activity Definition
The project director was not communicating on a regular basis with the persons
involved with the activities of the project. The persons recruited in the CCP were two
Information technology consultants, Jeremy and Taz, the call centre Supervisor Basil
and the Project Administrator, Sandy.
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The project manager asked for the project plan which was informally given in a raw data
format. The CCP should have had proper scope management which according to
PMBOK includes:
Scope Planning-plan and define the project scope
Scope Definition- Develop project scope
Create work breakdown structure- subdividing the project deliverables into
smaller, more managerial components.
Scope Verification- formal acceptance of completed project deliverables
Scope Control- control changes to the project scope.
Turner (1996) defines project scope management as,” ensuring that enough, but only
enough, work is undertaken to deliver the project’s purpose successfully.”
The project manager should therefore introduce a Scope management plan that will
develop the detailed project scope and work breakdown structure with the careful use of
factors and tools and techniques. The CCP had no charter, or plan, the project manager
would therefore have to introduce these inputs together with expert judgment and
standards to create the scope management plan.
When this is done the project manager would then be able to construct a work
breakdown structure so that clearer responsibility and accuracy would be defined
resulting in the scope baseline.
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Activity Control
In the CCP the activities carried out were not in any sort of planned document and have
not been reviewed and communicated with the neither the project director nor the
stakeholders.
Once the project manager establishes a work breakdown structure the activities should
be in accordance with the plan. The Project manager should generally communicate
and collect feedback in order to verify and update the project plan with the necessary
scope changes.
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6.0 Time Related Processes
General
Time is an important deliverable to consider when executing a project. The project has to take into account all activities, milestones, float, critical path and lead/lag time. It was mentioned that, “time was of the essence,” the Cleveland Callback Project (CCP) has acknowledged that there is Analogous estimating known as top-down estimating which means using the actual duration of a previous, similar activity as the basis for estimating the duration of a future activity. Senor personnel from the fire prevention authority who did not have any sort of Information Technology background knowledge assumed that three to four month period would be sufficient time to prepare before the go-live date, Tuesday 31 August 2010. The CCP does not have a clear timetable but an assumption of the time taken to complete specific activities.
Activity dependency planning
Activity is considered a work element that consumes time and resources.
When the project manager requested the project plan the two Information technology consultants did not have such proper planning process and gave the following information:
Requirement Analysis – 8 days Detailed design – 5 days Interface study – 15 days Data configuration – 30 days Prototyping-20 days Call centre reviews – 10days Implementation -8 days System testing -5days Call centre training – 5 days
The CCP did not construct any sort of network diagram to display the relationship of the activities mentioned above. The project manager should introduce some sort of network diagram to illustrate the starting and end point, predecessors, no loops or hangers, updated information and determine the critical path. The Precedence diagramming method, which uses nodes to represent activities and arrows to represent the dependencies, would be a suggestive diagram to construct.
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An example of precedence diagram method
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Estimation of duration
Activity resource estimating involved what persons equipment and material and what
quantities of each resource would be used and when each resource will be available to
perform project activities.
The responsibility of the activities should be identified from the work breakdown
structure, which as mentioned earlier was absent from the CCP. However, when the
project manager asked who worked on what activities the information was scribbled
down and handed over (the letters signify initials):
Status of activity
Requirement Analysis – J & T Done
Detailed design – T Done
Interface study – 50% of J, & 50% of T Done
Data configuration – J & S 40% Completed
Prototyping-T & B 50% Completed
Call centre reviews – J,T,B,S Not yet started
Implementation –T Not yet started
System testing –J,T,B,S Not yet started
Call centre training – J,B,S Not yet started
The estimation of duration of the CCP has not been formally linked to any sort of project
resource planning. Note also that due to “time was of the essence” quality practice was
lacking from the project. A fast tracking could have been used which carry out activities
in parallel. The working hours were extended as mentioned earlier as a technique to
reduce the time duration.
Schedule Development
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The format of the project schedule was poorly and informally done, not showing any key
events relating to milestones, critical activities, or lead time towards the project.
The project manager should introduce activity duration estimating, that take into
account, information on project scope and resources, and then developing durations for
input to schedules, also the project manager should construct this network diagram and
paying attention that there is a lead time of 8 days relating to Implementation.
Schedule Control
What if the CCP had originally developed planning procedures with work breakdown
structures and network diagrams? Then the stakeholders would have realized changes
and updates before unexpected time extensions and would have formally noted these
changes before implementation and prepare contingency or response plans. However,
the CCP did not proceed in that manner resulting in revised and unexpected changes.
The original go-live date was scheduled to be Tuesday 31 August then changed to
Monday 11 October and yet this date was still to be confirmed.
7.0 Cost related Processes
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General
Cost estimating is referred to determining the cost of human and material
resources needed to complete project activities. Cost budgeting is the allocation
of the cost estimates to individual project activities. There was no formal
documentation to manage cost in the Cleveland Callback Project (CCP).
Cost Estimation
In the CCP, the finance director considered a total project budget cost of 150,000
that was not formally documented and linked to any specific activities. This
shows an analogous approach which means the finance director acted as a form
of expert judgment to estimate the cost. Additionally the Budget did not take into
consideration any risk relating to cost.
Budgeting
What if a budget had been done in the CCP? Then specific cost would have
been allocated to specific activities and act as a managerial baseline also,
additional cost incurred to purchase higher quality desktop PCs would have been
noted earlier in the project, also cost incurred would have been controlled
throughout the project rather than relying on the financial statement expenditure
showing under cost estimation of the project. All team members would have
consulted and knew about the original budget cost.
Cost Control
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When notified from the financial statement that expenditure was already 142,450,
no one paid attention. The cost was not reviewed, managed or maintained in
respect to high cost risk of the project.
8.0 Resource Related Processes.
General
A resource plan has not been implemented; the IT support manager used a top
down approach to recruit the two IT consultants based upon a reputable contract
recruitment agency. However, one of the consultants had no prior fire service or
call centre experience which may arise in risk of the project.
Resource Planning
The CCP had encountered resourcing issues due to the lack of planning. The IT
support manager who had no system development experience required that the
consultants report to him rather than the project director, causing high risks to
occur.
9.0 Personnel Related Processes
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General
The CCP had established an Organizational structure (appendix 1) but does not
relate proper communication relationships between the project participants. The
organizational structure does not have a define authority, responsibility and job
description documented. The structure does not take into consideration the
project scope, size and local condition to the CCP.
Staff Allocation
There were no criteria prepared in concern with knowledge and experience to
recruit additional staff for instance the IT consultants as mentioned previously.
The IT support manager rather than the project director were involved in the
additional recruitment.
Team Development
A project team is members who usually belong to different groups, functions and
are assigned to activities relating to the same project. In the CCP the project
team that comprise of the stakeholders, project manager, the fire and rescue
personnel assisted full time or part time to the project along with the IT
consultants, a call centre supervisor and the project administrator.
The project does not consider the fire and rescue personnel in respect to salary
improvement cost.
What if the project director showed strong leadership skills, then motivating the
staff would have improved.
Turner (1996) included factors with motivation:
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Purpose- people believe in the importance of their work
Proactivity – people manage their own career development
Profit sharing – people share in the entrepreneurial culture
Progression – people value the opportunity to learn new things
Professional recognition – people want to be acknowledged for their
contribution.
10.0 Communication Related Processes
General
The CCP had not consisted of any communication plan; hence no project
progress reports were established or communicated.
Information Management
The CCP prepares information when the finance directors request it. The
information is not prepared on a timely interval. Similarly, collecting, classifying
and distributing information is not in any arranged and timely intervals. It was
noted that Taz and Jeremy worked in the same office and yet both were unaware
of certain issues. The responsibility was not given to anyone in particular to file,
update and retrieve any information, resulting in the misplacement of any
information. The project did not even have planned meeting agendas and again
was not communicated so the attendance of the meetings varied.
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Communication Control
The CCP was not monitored in the early and critical stages in the project,
however very late in the project as mentioned earlier a project director was hired
at a very late stage in the project. Communication strategies would have to now
be introduced and monitored to ensure effective communication.
11.0 Risk Related Processes
A project risk is “an uncertain event or condition that, if it occurs, has a positive or
negative effect on a project objective.” (PMBOK 2004)
There has been no probability or impact of risk assessment to determine the risk
value of the project.
The CCP involves numerous unknown risks which cannot be managed; the
organization must be committed to addressing risk management throughout the
project. Significant risk on the CCP would be unrealistic deadlines and resource
constraints. Due to lack of planning, poor allocation of time, cost, and resources
the CCP is exposed to project management risks.
Risk Control
The project plan does not consist of any contingency plan, as the risk occurs it is
being addressed and decisions are made upon the occurrence of the risk. The
project should have a risk management plan with proper approaches, tools and
data sources. Roles and responsibilities should be specifically assigned to
individuals.
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12.0 Learning from the project
At the project had not yet been closed but the organization did not have any
documented information stored, updated or retrieved from the CCP. As
mentioned the project was not completed but it is observed that the finance
director was unsatisfied mainly because the expenditure was not within the
budget and the project was not accounted for accurately.
13 .0 Opinion Forming
Seriously deficient
There were not any project management processes existing, for planning,
organizing, monitoring or controlling the CCP. The project scope does not match
the project objectives. There is excessive time delays and overspending. The
project team skills do not match the project requirements. The project does not
meet its objectives.
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14.0 Project Planning
Refer to Section B Gantt Chart on next page.
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15.0 Progress management
Refer to Section C Gantt chart part 1 on next page
Refer to section C Gantt chart part 2 on next page
Tactical options to meet the expected go live date 11 th October 2010:
Based on Task allocated, and duration of activities the finishes dated was not met on
11th October 2010 but rather on the 15th October 2010. This was due to insufficient
planning and lack of a work breakdown structure. In order to rectify this problem it is
necessary that the usage of the eight days lead time utilized. Lead time can be develop
when a task can start earlier then expected.
Considering that the finish date was 15th October 2010, the chances of meeting the
11thOctober 2010 was crucial therefore, five days was required to satisfy the objective
date. Referring to the Gantt chart, a lead of eight days was discovered. It is crucial that
management make use of five days from the eight leaving three days for risk
occurrence. Alternatively, A last resort solution could be Fast-tracking the CCP which
entails doing activities in parallel that would be done in sequence. However, as
mentioned earlier Fast-tracking should be used as a last resort resulting in rework and
increase risk. Another tactical option that may be used to bring the expected go-live
date to the 11th October 2010 is to practice stimulation which involves calculating
multiple project durations with different sets of activity assumption. The outcome of
what-if simulations can be used to assess the feasibility of the schedule under adverse
conditions, and in preparing contingency/response plans to overcome the impact of the
unexpected situation.
What if the CCP had engaged in proper time scheduling, then the objective time would
have been achieved. However, as a contingency plan the use of the lead time could be
a suggested option in meeting the go live date to 11th October, 2010.
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16.0 Budget creation
Refer to Section D Report on next page
Refer to Section E Report on next page
The cost of human and material resources needed to complete project activities is
known as cost estimating. Whereas, cost budgeting is allocating the cost estimates to
individual project activities. In the CCP the type of cost estimating used Analogous also
known as top down estimating which implies that the actual cost of a previous similar
project is used as a basis for estimating the cost of the current period. This type of
estimating us used in the early stages of the project normally at this time the detailed
information is limited.
An estimate was done (see Budgets reports) for the following reasons:
To evaluate a project’s cost and time before authorization
To provide a basis for project tracking
To establish a managerial baseline
To provide the project manager with a tool to assess planned versus actual
expectations.
To establish the resources required and the resulting schedule.
However, with estimating the CCP limitations were encountered:
Lack of information
Inexperienced estimators
Changes in project during implementation
Psychological factors
17.0 Conclusion
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The CCP should have initially chartered the project, giving an idea of
expectations that would enable management to meet the required objectives. If a
work breakdown structure was developed then the triple constraints, meaning
scope, time and cost would have been clarified and required updates to the
project would have been adjusted before certain risk had occurred. With proper
controls and regular monitoring the project would have been successfully
completed.
BibliographyAtkinson, R (1999). Project Management: Cost, time and quality: two best guesses and a phenomenon, it’s tome to accept other success criteria.
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Cohen, D. & Graham R. (2001). The Project Manager’s MBA, John Wiley & sons Inc.
Harvey Maylor (2005) Project Management 3rd edition; FT/Prentice Hall
Kerzner H, (1996). Project Management: A Systems approach to Planning, Scheduling and Controlling’ 9th Edition John Wiley and Sons Inc.
Lock D. (2007). Project Management, 9th ed., Gower, Aldershot
ISO 10006:1997(E) Quality Management – Guidelines to quality in Project Management
Websites Sources
Project Management
Website: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_management
Cited: 10th December 2010
All about Project Management
Website: http://managementhelp.org/plan_dec/project/project.htm
Cited 16th December 2010
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