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Presentation for Internet Librarian, Oct 29, 2013
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Speed Dating for Project Management Software
Margot Hanson, California Maritime AcademyAndrew Tweet,William Jessup UniversityKevin Pischke, William Jessup University
Annis Lee Adams, Golden Gate University
Internet Librarian 2013Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Project Management Principles & Best Practices
● A project is work that has a defined beginning, end, and goals.
● Project management is a set of tools to help allocate and track resources so that a project can be completed successfully, on time, and on budget.
● Project management is in contrast to operations management which has defined goals, but does not have a defined term.
Defining the Project1) Define the project scope in a written charter
a) Define success with goals & stakeholders (punchlist, phases, metrics)
b) Define timeline in relative or calendar termsc) Define resources (budget, personnel, equipment)d) Define what happens to the resources and
deliverables when the project is over2) If any one of these parameters changes,
then the others must adjust to compensate.3) Defining the scope will help prevent
misunderstandings between stakeholders and scope creep.
Allocating the Resources
A. Three types of resources, many techniquesa. Time (storyboards, weekly meetings, cascade chart)b. Personnel (kickoff/closing meetings, debriefs,
monitoring reports, task allocation, flow charts)c. Money (budget, release points, or other
accountability measures)
Project management phases
1. Planninga. Project scope defined and written up as charter
2. Build-upa. Allocation of needed resources, training, team
building, etc3. Implementation
a. Carrying out the planb. Modifying scope and resources as needed
4. Closeouta. Handing over deliverables, making the site live,
debriefing and reporting to stakeholders
Recommended reading on project management
HBR's 10 must reads on collaboration. (2013). Boston, Mass: Harvard Business Review Press.
HBR's guide to project management. (2013). Boston: Harvard Business Review Press.
Managing projects: Expert solutions to everyday challenges. (2006). Boston, Mass: Harvard Business School Press.
PMP (Project Management Professional) study guides (via ebrary and Ebsco).
Project Management Software Adoption Survey
● Survey ran from Aug 23 - Sept 13, 2013
● Distributed on CALIX, CALIBACA, ERIL, BayNet, New-Lib, Web4LIB, CODE4LIB, ILI, SCELC, CCCU
● 205 Respondents
Respondents’ Library Type
Academic Public Special
Staffing Levels at Respondents’ Libraries
1-9 FTE 10-24 FTE 25-49 FTE 50-99 FTE 100+ FTE
69% have not used software
Has your library used software that is designed specifically for project management?
No Yes Don’t Know
Dominant Themes
● Librarians (survey respondents) see a need for project management, but not sure where to go
● Missing base knowledge on project management
● Not sure which program will work best with their library workflow (or won’t get adopted)
Case Study
“No one should ever have a question about where a project stands” --Kevin Pischke
Don’t assume that someone is responsible--assign it directly to someone and make sure they know they’re responsible
Let’s take it slow
● Our Evergreen consultant introduced us to Trello during our ILS upgrade for testing and bug tracking
● In house we only used it to store good ideas for displays or events
Time to get serious (DTR)
● We started to use it as a PM tool when we had 7 different technology projects to implement at the same time. (EBSCO Discovery Service, Camino, Libguides, EBSCO Academic Ebooks, Streaming video database + 5 other databases, EBL patron driven loans/acquisitions, GetItNow)
● Developed workflow on projects & operations boards
● Developed board admins for oversight and assigning DRI’s to tasks
Case Study
Don’t be afraid to play the field -- you probably won’t marry the first one that comes along. So, jump in and don’t wait for “the perfect one!” --Margot & Lee
Lots of fish in the sea
● We developed a project management software evaluation matrix
● Tested various software to see if they fit our needs
Time to get serious (DTR)
● BaseCamp - Website redesign project● Trello, Asana, Podio: - e-resource troubleshooting;
presentation coordination
Top 4 Responses
What project management software has your library used?
MS Project Basecamp Jira Trello
How well did the software work for your library’s project(s)?
MS Project Basecamp Jira Trello
Bachelor #1
● Already in use with your organization● PMP on staff● You need a high level, complex tool ● Required to manage time, money, and
personnel
We’d set you up on a blind date with Microsoft Project if...
It’s Not Me, It’s You
● Steep learning curve ● Too feature rich● Difficult to share progress and updates● “all noise no light”
Bachelor #2
We’d set you up on a blind date with Basecamp if...
● You’re looking for something to manage your task-intensive, short-term projects (IT projects, event planning)
● You need a low barrier for adoption● You have a little money to spend● You want to keep everyone in the loop,
share files, and track timelines
It’s Not Me, It’s You
● “Basecamp timelines are not tied to resource allocations.”
● “Basecamp is a messy interface. Doesn't facilitate visually the organization of multiple projects very well.”
Bachelor #3
We’d set you up on a blind date with Jira if...
● You want to track issues/bugs● You have an IT/tech/digitization/web design
project● You want to set up multiple workflows● You want a very flexible/customizable
program● You have a little money to spend
It’s Not Me, It’s You
JIRA has a high learning curve for changes, i.e. it is very flexible, but therefore has many configuration options
Bachelor #4
We’d set you up on a blind date with Trello if...
● You have a team of 5 or fewer individuals● You primarily need task management not
time or budget management● You need an easy, shared tool in the cloud● You have $0 budget, and don’t need frills● You need easy file attachments, checklists,
assignment of DRI’s, mobile app
It’s Not Me, It’s You
● It doesn’t scale up for big projects● You have to make it fit into your workflow
or get a 3rd party app to integrate it into email and calendar
● You don’t have to assign DRI’s or due dates so things can slip through the cracks if you don’t monitor your boards
Take-aways
● Principles, practices, tools can be implemented at any level
● Pick the right tool for the job (lightweight, low-cost tools don’t need library director approval!)
● Software alone won’t solve your project management problems
Questions?