Chapter 5
Project Planning.
Project Scope.
Work Breakdown Structure.
Objectives
Acquire a general understanding of the parts of the project
management plan
Understand the importance of discovering and documenting
stakeholder requirements
Understand how to create a detailed scope statement and
work breakdown structure (WBS)
Learn how to match the right person, with the needed skill set,
to the appropriate activity
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Project Planning. Integration Management KA.
Project Planning starts with the
Project Plan Development process,
which is a part of the Integration
Management knowledge area.
The single deliverable from this
process is the Project Management
Plan – a consistent coherent
document; it consists of deliverables
for each of the other 8 Knowledge
Areas (KAs).
Project Plan =
Telling the team “WHAT TO DO”
Project Management Plan: Main Components
Scope management plan (Chapter 5) Lab 1
Work breakdown structure (WBS) (Chapter 5) Lab 1
Human Resource management plan (Chapter 5) Lab 1
Time (schedule) management plan (Chapter 6) Lab 2
Cost management plan (Chapter 6) Lab 2
Quality management plan (Chapter 7) Lab 3
Process improvement plan (Chapter 7) Lab 3
Communication management plan (Chapter 7)
Risk management plan (Chapter 8) Lab 4
Procurement management plan (Chapter 9) Lab 4
Many organizations not only have documented business templates for each part of the plan to
speed up development of the plan and to maintain consistency across projects but also may
have slightly different standard formats, based on different project characteristics, such as size,
complexity, length, and risk level.
For example, a small, low-risk project would have a shorter and less formal project planning
document than a large, complex project with members of the project team spread out all over the
world.
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Attributes of Good Project Plans
Plans should be dynamic
Plans should be flexible
Things always happen during the project to change each of these four constraints so
plans should be built to accommodate room for issues/problems/delays.
Plans should be updated as changes occur (Integrated Change
Control)
Plans should first and foremost guide project execution
Plans should never assume the team will work overtime, at least not
at the start
Assuming that the only way to hit the project plan objectives for 1) scope, 2) time, 3)
cost, and 4) quality is to schedule over time at the very beginning is a sure recipe for
disaster.
What the main reason to create Project Plan?
The answer: Project Cost and Project Time
The Cost of Software Change Law is a very
well-known law (see on the right). The Cost of SW Change
60-100x
Errors found “upstream” during the planning
phase cost on the order of 200 times less to
fix than errors found “downstream” during
the building of the product.
Planning “forecasting”, “seeing into the 1.5-6x
future” is not an easy task 1x
Definition Development After release
T. Capers Jones (1998) summed it up this
way: “The seeds of major software
disasters are usually shown in the first three
months of commencing the software
project. Hasty scheduling, irrational
commitments, unprofessional estimating
techniques, carelessness of the project
management function are the factors that
tend to introduce terminal problems.”
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Project Plan Creation and Analysis Paralysis
Although planning is crucial, project teams must be careful to avoid over-planning
The project planning must be appropriate to the size, complexity, and risk of the
project (small and easy projects -> small planning; large and complex projects ->
significant planning efforts.
Project managers must be careful to avoid what is known as “analysis paralysis” --
getting stuck in the analysis phase, trying to get everything defined perfectly
In software development, analysis paralysis typically manifests itself through exceedingly long phases
of project planning, requirements gathering, program design and data modeling, with little or no extra
value created by those steps. When extended over too long a timeframe, such processes tend to
emphasize the organizational (i.e., bureaucratic) aspect of the software project, while detracting from
its functional (value-creating) portion.
Analysis paralysis often occurs due to the lack of experience on the part of business systems analysts,
project managers or software developers, as well as a rigid and formal organizational culture.
Analysis paralysis is an example of an anti-pattern. Agile software development methodologies
explicitly seek to prevent analysis paralysis by promoting an iterative work cycle that emphasizes
working products over product specifications.
CS590 “SE” vs. CS593 “SE of WebApp”courses 7
From Integration Management KA to
Scope Management KA
Scope Management consists
of 3 processes:
1. Collect Requirements
2. Define Scope
3. Crete WBS (Work
Breakdown Structure)
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SW Requirements Engineering
A requirement is a singular documented need of what a particular product or service
should be or perform. It is a statement that identifies a necessary attribute, capability,
function, characteristic, or quality of a system in order for it to have value and utility
to a user.
1) Business requirements describe in business terms WHAT must be delivered or
accomplished to provide value.
2) Product requirements describe properties, functions and attributes of a system or
product (which could be one of several ways to accomplish a
set business requirements.)
3) Process requirements describe HOW activities performed by the developing
organization (methodologies to be followed, and constraints
that the organization must obey.
Main topics (or, components) *):
Functional and nonfunctional system requirements
Business rules
Impacts on any other systems and/or departments
Support and training requirements
Acceptance criteria for each requirement or set of requirements
Quality requirements
*) Multiple details are available in CS 592 course
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SW Requirements:
An Example
Source: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/products/microsoft-office-2010-system-requirements-HA101810407.aspx
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Scope Statement
Scope refers to all (100%) of the work involved in
creating the products of the project and
the processes used to create them
Scope statement describes the characteristics of
the product that the project was created to
deliver.
Scope statements may take many forms
depending on the type of project being implemented
and the nature of the organization. However, a
baseline scope statement should contain:
The project name
The project owner, sponsors, and stakeholders
The project charter (roles and responsibilities,
identities of stakeholders, etc.)
The problem statement
The project goals and objectives
The project requirements
The project deliverables
The project non-goals (what is out of scope)
Milestones (timetable, schedule)
Cost estimates Source: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templates/scope-statement-TC001142564.aspx
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Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
Work breakdown structure (WBS) is a
method used to define group of
project's discrete work elements in a
way that helps organize and define the
total work scope of the project.
WBS element may be a
a task,
a product,
data,
a component,
a service, or
any combination of these elements.
100% rule:
The WBS represents 100 percent of the
work required to produce the final
products, and, therefore,
All tasks must add up to 100% of the
total scope and should not go over 100%
(No “I forgot to add …” statements at all
after project WBS has been approved)
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Main idea: to
break the entire Project
project into
manageable and
quantifiable
components
(tasks)
Approaches to
create Work
Breakdown
Structure (WBS)
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Building the WBS
Various approaches can be used to build the WBS:
1. Analogy approach: A WBS is first created by looking for a similar projects done
in the past and using its WBS as a starting point. SE
Design Concept: “Do NOT reinvent the wheel” (check web
sites of similar projects)
2. Top-down approach Start with the largest items of the project and keep
breaking them down into smaller and smaller parts
3. Bottom-up approach: Start with the detailed tasks and roll them up
4. Thread-based approach Concentrate on most important items first
Using guidelines:
Some organizations, like the DoD, National Science Foundation (NSF) provide
guidelines/requirements for preparing a WBS
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Be a professional: be able to generate a list of advantages and
weaknesses (potential problems) of any idea, approach, method,
technique, SW, etc.
SWOT analysis: Strengths – Weaknesses – Opportunities - Threats
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The analogy approach: a sample
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Analyze Analogy Approach: Advantages and Issues
Advantages:
Is the fastest path to a completed WBS
Is a valuable tool for brainstorming a new project and looking for deliverables
Enhances cross-project consistency
Improves budget and time estimates
Improves resource allocations
Issues:
Ensure that the previous WBS is completely understood and similar
Ensure the previous WBS is accurate and updated
Critically review the previous WBS and its appropriateness for the new project
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Top-Down Approach: Advantages and Issues
Advantages:
Ensures projects are organized logically
based on the nature of the project
Promotes stakeholder participation in the
planning phase of the project
Can create a greater understanding of the
entire project by all participants
Issues:
Need to make sure major objectives are
not forgotten
Make sure to decompose the tasks to
appropriate levels
Can be time consuming, must guard
against “analysis paralysis”
Cost and time estimates are more difficult
to create and generally less accurate than
under the analogy approach
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Bottom-Up Approach: Advantages and Issues
Advantages
May lead to a more complete list of tasks
and detailed description of tasks
Promotes participation of various
stakeholders in the planning phase of the
project
Can create a greater understanding of the
entire project by all participants
Issues
Difficult to retain focus on the “big picture”
Need to make sure major objectives are
not forgotten
Harder to get organized into logical steps
or phases
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Thread Approach: Advantages and Issues
Advantages
Generally the most important stakeholder
objectives done first
Greater control and focus of the brainstorming
sessions
Promotes stakeholder participation in the
planning phase of the project
Can create a greater understanding of the entire
project by all participants
Issues
Make sure to not lose focus of the “big picture”
May lose site of the effect one objective may
have on another
Increases the need for communication
More successful when the project leader and
team has a good understanding of the project’s
objectives
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Which Approach to Choose?
Some recommendations …
In case of the existence of a similar project:
would lead you to the analogy approach which if done correctly is the
fastest and most accurate method
In case of an evolutionary type of project:
depends on experience level of the project manager and team:
- if little experience, choose the top-down approach;
- if many years of experience then choose a bottom-up approach
In case of a revolutionary type of project:
- if the product or process is very unique, never anything like it before in this
company or by this team then choose the top-down approach
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WBS Structure Example: Hierarchical Design-Based Form
Webster Software System -- A Hierarchical Design Model
(system, subsystems, and component design)
System Level
System (Webster System)
A subsystem
Level of Subsystems (Domains)
GUI Databases Security …...
(Databases, GUI, Security, HELP, etc.)
A component
Tables Level of Elements or Components
Functions Forms Macros
(DOs) Queries
…...
(tables, forms, queries, reports, macros
and modules, …)
A detail (attribute)
ID FN LN DOB YOA Status …
…... Level of Sub-elements, Details
(for ex., attributes)
(ID, First Name, Last Name, DOB,
YOA, status, …)
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WBS Example: Decision Tree-Based Form
Continued….
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WBS Example: GUI Hierarchical Design Model
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WBS Examples: Process-Based Form
http://iteconcorp.com/T6WorkBreakdownStructure.html 25
WBS Example:
Tabular Form
(to be used in
CS591 Lab 1, and
CS591 Lab 2)
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Basic Principles for Creating a WBS
The WBS represents 100% of the work required to produce the product.
As soon as you define more than 100% of the scope, you have committed to doing
more than you agreed to - scope creep has begun (100% Rule)
Each WBS element represents a single deliverable
Each deliverable is distinct
Accountability for each task can be assigned to one team member
Not all elements of the WBS need to be decomposed to the same depth
Have all reporting and control mechanisms been included
Be prepared for changes
Dictionary:
Control accounts – accounting or finance department assigned account codes used in the
accounting system to track costs
Statement of work – describing the details of the work involved in creating each deliverable
Responsible organization – who is responsible for each deliverable
Schedule for major milestones
Contract information if outside vendor involved
Quality requirements
Estimate of cost and resources required
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Chapter 5.
Project Planning.
Project Scope.
Additional (optional) information.
28
Project Management Plan:
A Development Process Guidelines
A project plan is a document used to coordinate all project
planning documents
Its main purpose is to guide project execution
Project plans assist the project manager in leading the project
team and assessing project status
Project performance should be measured against a baseline
project plan
Building the plan should not be done in secret or in isolation;
the whole project team needs to participate
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SW Project Plan and SW Analysis Paralysis
http://www.thoughtclusters.com/2009/09/software-analysis-paralysis/
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What Is Project Scope?
Scope - refers to all (100%) of the work involved in creating the products of the
project and the processes used to create them
A deliverable - is a particular product produced as part of a project, such as
hardware or software, planning documents, or meeting minutes
Scope management plan describes how the project team will
- define the scope,
- develop the detailed scope statement,
- define and develop the work breakdown structure (WBS),
- verify the scope, and
- control the scope
A scope statement describes the characteristics of the product that the project was
created to deliver.
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Scope Statement Depends on:
1. Project size, including the number of people, dollar value, duration, and
geographic span
2. Degree of risk to the business
3. Cash requirements, such as length of time for return on investment and initial
cash requirements
4. Technology utilized (for example, maturity, experience of current staff)
5. Project team experience with technology, business, and industry
6. Nature of the deliverables, such as whether this is a new product or service,
an upgrade, or a repair
7. Strategic importance of the project to the organization
8. Project definition (for example, whether the requirements are undefined,
partially defined, or poorly defined)
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