Project
Management
Project
Management
Agenda
Introductions
Course Objective
Unit 1: Introduction to Project Management
Unit 2: Project Definition
Unit 3: Project Planning
Introductions
What is your Project Management Experience?
What types of projects will you be involved in?
What would you like to get out of the course?
Course Objectives
Learn what project management is and the qualities of an
effective project manager.
Understand the nine knowledge areas of project management
and how they can be applied to your project.
Discover the phases of a project and what deliverables are
expected when.
Identify a project’s key stakeholders.
Understand the different types of business cases and how to
create a Statement of Work.
Learn to be prepared for the unexpected by utilizing risk
management and change control.
Learn how to organize project activities by creating a Work
Breakdown Structure.
Create a network diagram to track your project’s progress.
Learn budgeting and estimating techniques.
Unit 1
Introduction to Project
Management
Introduction to Project Management
Project Failures
Project Successes
What is Project Management?
KeyFunctional Areas of Project
Management
Project Life Cycle
Project Failure
Identify reasons that project fail
Reasons for Project Failure
1. Poor project and program management
discipline
2. Lack of executive-level support
3. No linkage to the business strategy
4. Wrong team members
5. No measures for evaluating the success
of the project
6. No risk management
7. Inability to manage change
Project Success Criteria
On time
On budget
Meetingthe goals that have been
agreed upon
Iron Triangle
Pick Any Two
What is a Project?
Temporary with specific start and
end dates
Unique
Progress elaboration
What is a Project Manager?
Chapter 2
Ultimately responsible for the Project’s Success
Plan and Act
Focus on the project’s end
Be a manager & leader
Seven Traits of Good Project
Managers
Trait 1
Enthusiasm for the project
Trait 2
Ability to manage change effectively
Trait 3
A tolerant attitude toward ambiguity
Trait 4
Team – building and negotiating skills
Seven Traits of Good Project
Managers
Trait 5
A customer-first orientation
Trait 6
Adherence to the priorities of business
Trait 7
Knowledge of the industry or technology
Project Success
12 Golden Rules (Chapter 3)
Rule #1
Thou shalt gain consensus on project outcome.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule #2
Thou shalt build the best team possible.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule #3
Thou shalt develop a comprehensive,
viable plan and keep it up-to-date.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule #4
Thou shalt determine how much stuff
you really need to get things done.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule #5
Thou shalt have a realistic schedule.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule #6
Thou won’t try to do more than can be
done.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule #7
Thou will remember that people count.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule #8
Thou will gain the formal and ongoing
support of management and
stakeholders.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule 9
Thou must be willing to change.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule 10
Thou must keep others informed of
what you’re up to.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule 11
Thou must be willing to try new things.
Project Success
12 Golden Rules
Rule 12
Thou must become a leader
Project Management
Project Management
The “application of knowledge,
skills, tools and techniques to
project activities to meet project
requirements.”
9 Knowledge areas
1. Integration Management
Fitting everything together
Planning
Project Changes
2. Project Scope Management
Clear scope statement
Prevent scope creep
3. Project Time Management
Time and Schedule
Planning
Managing
4. Project Cost Management
Manage costs
Out of your control
Competing projects
5. Project Quality
Management
Planning quality
Enforcing quality
Checking quality control
6. Project Human Resource
Management
Organizational planning
Staff acquisition
Making a team
7. Project Communications
Management
Communication plan
8. Project Risk Management
Risk management plan
9. Project Procurement
Management
Acquisition
and contract
management
Project Life Cycle
Project Definition Phase
Initiate the project
Identify the Project Manager
Develop the Project Charter
Conduct a Feasibility Study
Define Planning Phase
Sign off on the Project Charter
Project Planning Phase
Organize and staff the project
Develop a Project Plan
Sign off on the Project Plan
Project Execution Phase
Execute the Project Plan
Manage the Project Plan
Implement the project’s results
Sign off on project’s completion
Project Close-out Phase
Document the lessons learned during the
project
After-implementation review
Provide performance feedback
Close-out contracts
Complete administrative close-out
Deliver project completion report
Unit 2
Project Definition
Project Definition
Stakeholder Identification
Business Case
Risk
Constraints
Stakeholder Identification
Stakeholder definition
Key stakeholders to identify
Project sponsor
Customer
Project team
Functional managers
Communicate with everyone
Manage conflicts in priorities
The Customer
Uses the product or services
May be internal or external
Provides requirements
May have multiple categories
Project Sponsor
Alsoshares responsibility for project
success
Hasauthority to make decisions and
may provide funding
Overcome political and
organizational obstacles
Steering Committee
Groupof stakeholders who approve
and agree on:
Project scope
Schedule
Budgets
Plans
Changes
Working Committee
Line managers who are responsible
for delivering business results once
the project is completed
Functional Managers
Maymanage or supply people that
work on the team
Need to be communicated with
Needtheir commitment to the
project
Business Case
Reasons why the project is undertaken
Options that were considered
Benefits that are hoped to be realized
High-level risks
High-level costs & schedule
Cost/benefit analysis
Feasibility Study
A general estimate used to
determine whether a particular
project should be pursued.
Business Goals & Objectives
Need to understand:
Goals(the need for the project
and the measurable benefits)
Scope
Time to complete
Estimates
of timeline, resource
requirements and costs
SMART goals
S – Specific
M – Measurable
A – Agreed upon
R – Realistic
T – Time related
Risk management
Identify
Sources of risk
Funding
Time
Staffing
Customer relations
Project size and/or complexity
Overall structure
Organizational resistance
External factors
Risk Analysis
Probability
Impact
Overall exposure = probability X impact
Risk Plan
Accept
Avoid
Mitigation
Contingency with trigger
Transfer
Risk Track and Control
Risk log
Review and update regularly
Assign ownership to risk
Constraints
Real-world limits
Typical constraints:
Budget
Schedule
People
Real world
Facilities and equipment
Unit 3
Project planning
Project Planning
Work Breakdown Structure
Network diagramming
Scheduling
Budgeting
Work Breakdown Structure (WBS)
Breaks large project into manageable units
Total project
Subprojects
Milestones (completion of an important
set of work packages)
Major activities (summary tasks)
Work packages (tasks, activities, work
elements)
WBS
Helps to:
Identify all work needing to be done
Logicallyorganize work so that it can
be scheduled
Assign work to team members
Identify resources needed
Communicate what has to be done
Organize work using milestones
WBS
1. Break work into independent work packages
that can be sequenced, assigned, scheduled
and monitored
2. Define the work package at the appropriate
level of detail
3. Integrate the work packages into a total
system
4. Present in a format easily communicated to
people. Each work package must have a
deliverable and a time for completing that
deliverable
5. Verify the work packages that will meet the
goals and objectives of the project
Work Packages
Way of managing the project by
breaking it down
Help determine skills required and
amount of resources needed
Communicate work that needs to be
done
Work sequences are identified and
understood
WBS tips
Deliverables should be clearly
stated
Allwork in the same package should
occur at the same time
A work package should only include
related work elements
Network Diagrams
Logicalrepresentations of
scheduled project activities
Define the sequence of work in a
project
Drawn from left to right
Reflect the chronological order of
the activities
WBS and Network Diagram
WBS: what needs to be done
NetworkDiagram: shows the
workflow, not just the work
Precedence
Precedence defines the sequencing
order
How work elements are related to
one another in the plan
Concurrent (Parallel)
activities
Many activities can be done at the
same time as long as resources are
available
Network Diagram rules
Boxes hold description of each task
Lines connect activities to one another
Activities are laid out horizontal from
left to right
Parallel activities are in the same
column
Precedence is shown by drawing lines
from activity to activity
One activity may depend on the
completion of multiple other activities
Lead and Lag
Lead– amount of time that
precedes the start of work on
another activity
Lag – amount of time after one
activity is started or finished before
the next activity can be started or
finished
Other network diagrams
PERT– Performance Evaluation and
Review Technique
Better for software-oriented projects
Uses
3 time estimates to determine
most probable
CPM – Critical Path Method
Better for construction type projects
One time estimate
Scheduling
1. Establish scheduling assumptions
2. Estimate the resources, effort and duration
• Effort – time that it takes to work on the
activity
• Duration – the time to complete the activity
3. Determine calendar dates for activities
4. Adjust individual resource assignments
5. Chart final schedule
Estimating Time
Have people who are doing the
work provide the estimates
Get an expert’s estimate
Find a similar task
Look for relationship between
activity and time (parametric
estimate)
Educated guess
PERT Estimating
Optimistic estimate (OD)
Most likely (MLD)
Pessimistic estimate (PD)
Expected = [OD + 4(MLD) +PD] / 6
Contingency
Don’t pad estimates
Will never get good estimates
Adds expense and time
Add contingency as an activity
Typically 10-15%
Critical Path & Float
Critical Path
Sequence of tasks that forms the longest
duration of the project
Float
Amount of time that an activity may be
delayed from its earliest possible start date
without delaying the project finish date
Latest possible finish date – earliest
possible start – duration = total float
Normalizing the Schedule
Assign people to the schedule
Startwith the critical path first,
non-critical tasks second
Loading and Leveling
Resource Load – the amount of work
that is assigned to a resource
Resource Leveling – redistribution to
even out the distribution of work
across all resources
Scheduling Tips
Ensure that learning time is
identified
Ensurethat administration time is
included
Beaware that resources seldom
work 100% of the time on one
project
Budgeting
Budget = People + Resources + Time
Direct & Indirect Costs
Direct costs
Directly attributed to the project
Indirect costs
Shared amongst other projects
Types of Budgeting
Bottom-up
Top-Down
Phased
Contingency Reserve
10-15% of budget is normal
Don’tpad but manage the
contingency
Unit 3 Review
Make a Communication Plan of the High Impact Project in
your agency/organization following the format below. The
project must be promoted so that the general public will be
aware of the rationale of the said project.
ACTIVITIES COMMUNICATION MEDIUM OF TIMELINE/ BUDGET
STRATEGIES COMMUNICATION COVERAGE FREQUENCY
PRE-ACTIVITIES
DURING
POST-ACTIVITIES
Activities must be categorized into PRE-, DURING,
AND POST-
Sample Communication Plan
TIMELINE/
ACTIVITIES STRATEGIES MEDIUM COVERAGE FREQUENCY
I. REGULAR ADVOCACY PROGRAMS
1. Training, Induction/ Closing 1. Film Showing Videos Region-wide Every conduct
Program shown in (Venues of the
1.1 Video clips big screens. where said activities.
1.1 PESFA containing programs/
1.2 TWSP messages or Video files ceremonies
1.3 STEP advertorials are are
of Sec. Joel available at conducted.
2. Press Conference/Media Briefing Villanueva TESDA-
promoting Caraga This will be
3. Conference tech-voc Regional shown before
3.1 TVI Administrators education Office) the program
3.2 Trainers-Assessors and training. starts.)
II. MAJOR EVENTS 1.2 Videos of
Success
1. Regional/Provincial Trainees’ Stories of
Day TVET
2. Mobile Tech-Voc Caravan Graduates
3. Regional Skills Competition
4. TVET Roadshow in Dinagat
Email the Communication Plan on or before
Saturday, July 16, 2016 to:
[email protected]
Email Subject:
Communication Plan - <YOUR NAME &
AGENCY/ORGANIZATION>
Ex: Communication Plan - ROBERT E. ROPEROS, TESDA-Caraga
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