Chapter 1:
An Introduction to
Project, Program, and
Portfolio
Management
ote: See the text itself for full citations. Text Web site is www.intropm.com
Learning Objectives
Understand the growing need for better
project, program, and portfolio
management
Explain what a project is, provide examples
of projects, list various attributes of
projects, and describe project constraints
Describe project management and discuss
key elements of the project management
framework, including project stakeholders,
the project management knowledge areas,
common tools and techniques, and project
success factors
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 2
Learning Objectives
(continued)
Discuss the relationship between project,
program, and portfolio management and their
contributions to enterprise success
Describe the project management profession,
including suggested skills for project, program,
and portfolio managers, the role of professional
organizations like the Project Management
Institute, the importance of certification and
ethics, project management careers, and the
growth of project and portfolio management
software
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 3
Introduction
Many organizations today have a new or
renewed interest in project management (PM)
The top skills employers look for in new
college graduates are all related to project
management:
◦ the ability to work in a team structure
◦ the ability to make decisions and solve problems
◦ the ability to plan, organize and prioritize work
In 2013, the average salary for someone in the
project management profession in U.S. dollars was
$108,000 per year in the United States; $134,658 in
Australia, (the highest-paid)
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 4
More Motivation to Study
PM
Organizations waste $109 million for every
$1 billion spent on projects, according to
PMI’s Pulse of the Profession® report
The U.S. spends $2.3 trillion on projects
every year, and the world as a whole
spends nearly $10 trillion on projects of all
kinds, or about one fourth of the U.S. and
the world’s gross domestic product
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 5
What Went Wrong?
A 1995 Standish Group study (The CHAOS
Report) found that only 16.2 percent of
information technology (IT) application
development projects were successful in
meeting scope, time, and cost goals. Over
31 percent of the projects were canceled
before completion, costing over $81 billion
in the U.S. alone
A PriceWaterhouseCoopers study of 200
companies from 30 different countries
found that over half of all projects fail
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Advantages of Using Formal
Project Management
Better control of financial, physical, and
human resources
Improved customer relations
Shorter development times
Lower costs
Higher quality and increased reliability
Higher profit margins
Improved productivity
Better internal coordination
Higher worker morale
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 7
What Is a Project?
A project is “a temporary endeavor
undertaken to create a unique product,
service, or result”*
Operations is work done to sustain the
business
Projects end when their objectives have
been reached, or the project has been
terminated
*Project Management Institute, Inc., A Guide to the Project Management Body
of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide, Fifth Edition) (2013).
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 8
Examples of Projects
A young couple hires a firm to design and build
them a new house
A retail store manager works with employees to
display a new clothing line
A medical technology firm develops a device that
connects to smart phones
A school implements new government standards
for tracking student achievement
A pharmaceutical company launches a new drug
The automobile industry develops standards for
electric cars
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 9
Video Highlights
The Project Management Institute (PMI)
recognizes outstanding performance in
project management by announcing a Project
of the Year Award winner. You can watch
videos of the following projects:
◦ 2014: AP60 Phase 1 Project, Jonquiere, Quebec,
Canada
◦ 2013: Adelaide Desalination Project Adelaide,
Australia
◦ 2012: Umatilla Chemical Agent Disposal Facility
Operations Phase, Hermiston, Oregon, USA
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 10
History of PM Video
You can also learn about the
history of project management (music only
video)
Or hear the author’s perspective by Mark
Kozak-Holland
See www.intropm.com for links to all video
highlights
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 11
Project Attributes
A project:
◦ Has a unique purpose
◦ Is temporary
◦ Is developed using progressive elaboration or in
an iterative fashion
◦ Requires resources, often from various areas
◦ Should have a primary customer or sponsor
The project sponsor usually provides the direction
and funding for the project
◦ Involves uncertainty
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 12
Figure 1-1. Psychic (Slightly Modified
Cartoon from www.xkcd.com)
Project managers work with the project sponsors,
the project team, and the other people involved in a
project to define, communicate, and meet project
goals.
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Project Constraints
Every project is constrained in different ways.
Some project managers focus on the triple
constraint (meeting scope, time, and cost goals)
◦ Scope: What work will be done as part of the project? What
unique product, service, or result does the customer or
sponsor expect from the project?
◦ Time: How long should it take to complete the project?
What is the project’s schedule?
◦ Cost: What should it cost to complete the project? What is
the project’s budget? What resources are needed?
Other constraints include quality, risk, and
resources
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 14
Figure 1-2. Typical Project
Constraints
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 15
What is Project
Management?
Project management is “the application
of knowledge, skills, tools and techniques to
project activities to meet project
requirements.”*
*Project Management Institute, Inc., A Guide to the Project Management
Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide, Fifth Edition) (2012).
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 16
Figure 1-3. Project
Management Framework
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 17
Project Stakeholders
Stakeholders are the people involved in or
affected by project activities
Stakeholders include:
◦ The project sponsor
◦ The project manager
◦ The project team
◦ Support staff
◦ Customers
◦ Suppliers
◦ Opponents to the project
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 18
Project Management
Knowledge Areas
Project integration management is an overarching function that
coordinates the work of all other knowledge areas. It affects
and is affected by all of the other knowledge areas.
Project scope management involves working with all
appropriate stakeholders to define, gain written agreement for,
and manage all the work required to complete the project
successfully.
Project time management includes estimating how long it will
take to complete the work, developing an acceptable project
schedule given cost-effective use of available resources, and
ensuring timely completion of the project.
Project cost management consists of preparing and managing
the budget for the project.
Project quality management ensures that the project will satisfy
the stated or implied needs for which it was undertaken.
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 19
Project Management Knowledge
Areas (continued)
Project human resource management is concerned with
making effective use of the people involved with the project.
Project communications management involves generating,
collecting, disseminating, and storing project information.
Project risk management includes identifying, analyzing,
and responding to risks related to the project.
Project procurement management involves acquiring or
procuring goods and services for a project from outside the
performing organization.
Project stakeholder management focuses on identifying
project stakeholders, understanding their needs and
expectations, and engaging them appropriately throughout
the project. Note that PMI added stakeholder management
as a tenth knowledge area to the PMBOK® Guide, Fifth
Edition in 2013.
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 20
Project Management Tools and
Techniques
Project management tools and techniques assist
project managers and their teams in various
aspects of project management.
Note that a tool or technique is more than just a
software package.
Specific tools and techniques include:
◦ Project charters, scope statements, and WBS (scope)
◦ Gantt charts, network diagrams, critical path
analyses (time)
◦ Net present value, cost estimates, and earned value
management (cost)
◦ See Figure 1-4 for more examples
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Figure 1-4. Common Project Management
Tools and Techniques by Knowledge Areas
Knowledge Area/Category Tools and Techniques
Integration management Project selection methods, project management
methodologies, project charters, project management
plans, project management software, change requests,
change control boards, project review meetings, lessons-
learned reports
Scope management Scope statements, work breakdown structures, mind
maps, statements of work, requirements analyses, scope
management plans, scope verification techniques, and
scope change controls
Time management Gantt charts, project network diagrams, critical-path
analyses, crashing, fast tracking, schedule performance
measurements
Cost management Net present value, return on investment, payback
analyses, earned value management, project portfolio
management, cost estimates, cost management plans,
cost baselines
Quality management Quality metrics, checklists, quality control charts, Pareto
diagrams, fishbone diagrams, maturity models,
statistical methods
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Figure 1-4. Common Project Management Tools
and Techniques by Knowledge Areas
(continued)
Knowledge Area/Category Tools and Techniques
Human resource management Motivation techniques, empathic listening, responsibility
assignment matrices, project organizational charts,
resource histograms, team building exercises
Communications management Communications management plans, kickoff meetings,
conflict management, communications media selection,
status and progress reports, virtual communications,
templates, project Web sites
Risk management Risk management plans, risk registers, probability/impact
matrices, risk rankings
Procurement management Make-or-buy analyses, contracts, requests for proposals or
quotes, source selections, supplier evaluation matrices
Stakeholder management Stakeholder registers, stakeholder analyses, issue logs,
interpersonal skills, reporting systems
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Super Tools
“Super tools” are those tools that have
high use and high potential for improving
project success, such as:
◦ Software for task scheduling (such as project
management software)
◦ Scope statements
◦ Requirements analyses
◦ Lessons-learned reports
Tools already extensively used that have
been found to improve project importance
include:
◦ Progress reports
◦ Kick-off meetings
◦ Gantt charts
◦ Change requests
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 24
What Went Right? Improved
Project Performance
Follow-up studies by the Standish Group
showed some improvement in the statistics for
IT projects:
The number of successful projects has doubled, from
16 percent in 1994 to 39 percent in 2012
The number of failed projects decreased from 31
percent in 1994 to 18 percent in 2012
“This year’s results represent a high water mark for
success rates in the history of CHAOS research…
Increases in project management as a profession and
trained project management professionals can be
tied directly to increases in success rates.”
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 25
Project Success
There are different ways to define project
success:
◦ The project met scope, time, and cost goals.
◦ The project satisfied the customer/sponsor.
◦ The project produced the desired results.
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What is a Program?
• A program is:
– “a group of related projects managed in a
coordinated way to obtain benefits and control not
available from managing them individually”*
– A program manager provides leadership and
direction for the project managers heading the
projects within the program
*Project Management Institute, Inc., A Guide to the Project Management
Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide, Fifth Edition) (2013)
27
Copyright 2008
Figure 1-5. Example
Programs
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 28
Project Portfolio
Management
Project portfolio management is an
emerging business strategy in which
organizations group and manage projects
and programs as a portfolio of investments
that contribute to the entire enterprise’s
success.
Pacific Edge Software’s product manager,
Eric Burke, defines project portfolio
management as “the continuous process of
selecting and managing the optimum set of
project initiatives that deliver maximum
business value.”
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 29
Project and Program Management
Compared to Project Portfolio Management
Project and program management address
questions like:
◦ Are we carrying out projects well?
◦ Are projects on time and budget?
◦ Do project stakeholders know what they should
be doing?
Portfolio management addresses
questions like:
◦ Are we working on the right projects?
◦ Are we investing in the right areas?
◦ Do we have the right resources to be
competitive?
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 30
The Project Management Profession
Project, program, and portfolio managers
need to develop specific skills
Certification is available for project
managers
There are many software tools to assist in
project, program, and portfolio
management
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 31
Suggested Skills for Project
Managers
Knowledge of the following:
All ten project management knowledge areas
The application area (domain, industry,
market, etc.)
The project environment (politics, culture,
change management, etc.)
General management (financial management,
strategic planning, etc.)
Human relations (leadership, motivation,
negotiations, etc.)
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Media Snapshot – Good Project
Management Skills from The
Apprentice
Leadership and Be a team player
professionalism are Don’t be overly
crucial emotional and stay
Know what your organized
sponsor expects Work on projects and for
from the project, people you believe in
and learn from your Think outside of the box
mistakes Some luck is involved in
Trust your team, project management,
and you should always
and delegate
aim high
decisions
Know the business
Stand up for
yourself Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 33
Figure 1-6. Most Significant Characteristics of
Effective and Ineffective Project Managers*
EFFECTIVE PROJECT INEFFECTIVE
MANAGERS PROJECT
MANAGERS
Lead by example Set bad examples
Are visionaries Are not self-assured
Are technically Lack technical
competent expertise
Are decisive Avoid or delay making
decisions
Are good Are poor
communicators communicators
Are good motivators Are poor motivators
*Zimmerer, Thomas W. and Mahmoud M. Yasin, "A Leadership Profile of
American Project Managers," Project Management Journal (March 1998), 31-
38.
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 34
Importance of Leadership
Skills
Effective project managers provide
leadership by example.
A leader focuses on long-term goals and
big-picture objectives while inspiring people
to reach those goals
A manager deals with the day-to-day
details of meeting specific goals
Project managers often take on the role of
both leader and manager
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 35
FIGURE 1-7. Ten Most Important
Skills and Competencies for
Project Managers*
1. People skills 6. Verbal communication
2. Leadership 7. Strong at building teams
3. Listening 8. Conflict
resolution/management
4. Integrity, ethical 9. Critical thinking/problem
behavior, consistent solving
5. Strong at building trust 10. Understands and
balances priorities
*Jennifer Krahn, “Effective Project Leadership: A Combination of Project
Manager Skills and Competencies in Context,” PMI Research Conference
Proceedings (July 2006).
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 36
Different Skills Needed in
Different Situations
Large projects: leadership, relevant prior
experience, planning, people skills, verbal
communication, and team-building skills are
most important
High uncertainty projects: risk management,
expectation management, leadership, people
skills, and planning skills are most important
Very novel projects: leadership, people skills,
having vision and goals, self-confidence,
expectations management, and listening skills
are most important
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 37
Additional Skills for Program and
Portfolio Managers
Program managers normally have
experience as project managers. They often
rely on their past experience, strong
business knowledge, leadership capability,
and communication skills to manage
programs
Portfolio managers must have strong
financial and analytical skills and understand
how projects and programs can contribute to
meeting strategic goals
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 38
Best Practice
A best practice is “an optimal way recognized by
industry to achieve a stated goal or objective.”*
Robert Butrick suggests that organizations need to
follow basic principles of project management,
including these two mentioned earlier in this
chapter:
● Make sure your projects are driven by your strategy. Be able
to demonstrate how each project you undertake fits your
business strategy, and screen out unwanted projects as soon
as possible.
● Engage your stakeholders. Ignoring stakeholders often leads
to project failure. Be sure to engage stakeholders at all
*Project
stages Management
of a Institute,
project, and Inc., Organizational
encourage Project Management
teamwork and Maturity
Model (OPM3) Knowledge Foundation (2003), p. 13.
commitment
**Ultimate Businessat all times.
Library, Use leadership
Best Practice: and open
Ideas and Insights from the World’s
communications
Foremost to make
Business Thinkers, things
Perseus happen.**
Publishing (2003).
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 39
Project Management
Certification
PMI provides certification as a Project
Management Professional (PMP)
A PMP has documented sufficient project
experience, agreed to follow a code of
ethics, and passed the PMP exam
The number of people earning PMP
certification is increasing quickly
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 40
Figure 1-8. Growth in PMP
Certification, 1993-2014
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 41
Maintaining Certification
There are also requirements to maintain
active certification status by continuing to
develop expertise
The PMI talent triangle includes:
◦ technical project management
◦ strategic and business management, and
◦ leadership
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 42
PMI Student Membership
and Certification
Information
As a student, you can join PMI for a reduced
fee ($40 vs. $129 in 2015)
Also consider earning the Certified
Associate in Project Management (CAPM)
credential from PMI
If you complete a bachelor’s degree, you do
not need any work experience to earn the
CAPM
However, if you have enough work
experience, the PMP is more marketable
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 43
Ethics in Project
Management
Ethics — a set of principles that guide our
decision making based on personal values
of what is “right” and “wrong” — is an
important part of all professions
Project managers often face ethical
dilemmas.
In order to earn PMP certification, applicants
must agree to the PMP code of ethics and
professional conduct
Several questions on the PMP exam are
related to professional responsibility,
including ethics
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 44
Project Management Careers
Today, individuals and organizations often take a
more proactive approach to becoming a project
manager
The need for project managers is evident in
recent studies and job postings
◦ Between 2010 and 2020, 15.7 million new project
management roles will be created globally across
seven project-intensive industries
◦ Indeed.com listed almost 347,000 jobs in the U.S.
when searching for project manager in early 2015
◦ Sixty percent of hiring managers say interest in project
management careers among younger job applicants
has grown over the past decade
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 45
Possible Career Path
Project administrator
Junior project coordinator
Senior project coordinator
Project manager level 1
Project manager level 2
Project manager level 3
Project manager level 4
Program manager
Senior program manager
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 46
Project Management
Software
There are hundreds of different products available
today
Microsoft Project continues to lead the market with
over 880,000 customer and 22 million users. See
Appendix A for details on the various configurations
available for Microsoft Project and detailed instructions
for using Project Professional 2013, the product
available for a free trial
Three main categories of tools are the following:
◦ Low-end tools: Handle single or smaller projects well; cost
under $200 per user. Smart phone apps and/or integration
with them also available
◦ Midrange tools: Handle multiple projects and users; cost
$200-600 per user; Microsoft Project is the most popular
◦ High-end tools: Also called enterprise project management
software; often licensed on a per-user basis
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 47
Free Trials and Information on Using Project 2013,
MindView, Basecamp, and Other Software
A 60-day evaluation copy of Microsoft Project is
available from Microsoft’s Web site at
www.microsoft.com, and users of this book can
access a special trial of MindView Business
software at www.matchware.com/intropm
Note that both of these tools require downloads
and Windows software as of early 2015
Basecamp is a totally online project
management tool that does not require
Windows. Educators can request a free
Basecamp account without a time restriction
from www.basecamp.com
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 48
Figure 1-9. Screen from Microsoft
Project Showing a Gantt Chart
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 49
Chapter Summary
A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to
create a unique product, service, or result
Project management is the application of knowledge,
skills, tools, and techniques to project activities to
meet project requirements
A program is a group of related projects managed in a
coordinated way to obtain benefits and control not
available from managing them individually
Project portfolio management involves organizing and
managing projects and programs as a portfolio of
investments that contribute to the entire enterprise’s
success
The project management profession continues to
grow and mature
Copyright 2015 Kathy Schwalbe LLC 50