Software Project Management
Software Project Management
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What is a project?
Some dictionary definitions:
“A specific plan or design”
“A planned undertaking”
“A large undertaking e.g. a public works scheme”
Longmans dictionary
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Jobs versus projects
Feasibility study
Is project technically feasible and worthwhile from a business
point of view?
Planning
Only done if project is feasible
Execution
Implement plan, but plan may be changed as we go along
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• Contract management
• Technical project management
• SPM activities
– Feasibility study
– Planning
– Project execution
• ISO 12207 – software development life cycle
standard
The software development life-cycle (ISO
12207)
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ISO 12207 life-cycle
Requirements analysis
– Requirements elicitation: what does the client
need?
– Analysis: converting ‘customer-facing’
requirements into equivalents that developers
can understand
– Requirements will cover
• Functions
• Quality
• Resource constraints i.e. costs
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ISO 12207 life-cycle
• Architecture design
– Based on system requirements
– Defines components of system: hardware,
software, organizational
– Software requirements will come out of this
• Code and test
– Of individual components
• Integration
– Putting the components together
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ISO12207 continued
• Qualification testing
– Testing the system (not just the software)
• Installation
– The process of making the system operational
– Includes setting up standing data, setting
system parameters, installing on operational
hardware platforms, user training etc
• Acceptance support
– Including maintenance and enhancement
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Some ways of categorizing projects
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• Plan, method, methodologies
– Plan utilizes method
– Methodologies: group of methods
Setting objectives
• Answering the question ‘What do we have
to do to have a success?’
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Objectives
Informally, the objective of a project can be defined by
completing the statement:
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Objectives should be SMART
S– specific, that is, concrete and well-defined
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Goals/sub-objectives continued
Often a goal can be allocated to an individual.
Individual may have the capability of achieving goal,
but not the objective on their own e.g.
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Measures of effectiveness
How do we know that the goal or objective has been
achieved?
By a practical test, that can be objectively assessed.
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Stakeholders
These are people who have a stake or interest in
the project
In general, they could be users/clients or
developers/implementers
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The business case
Benefits of delivered project must
Benefits outweigh costs
Costs include:
- Development
- Operation
Costs
Benefits
- Quantifiable
- Non-quantifiable
£
£ Cost-benefit analysis
Business model: quantification
of benefits
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• Project success and failure
– Project objective, business objective
• Project success/delivery, business failure
• Project failure/delivery, business success
– Customer relationships
• Project management
processes/PRINCE2/PMBOK
– Phases/activities
• Project initiation/project planning
• Project execution/project monitoring and
control/project plan revision
• Project closing
• Management control: data collection,
information, plans, modelling,
implementation
• Management
– Planning: deciding what is to be done
– Organizing: making arrangements
– Staffing: selecting right people for the job
– Directing: giving instructions
– Monitoring: checking on progress
– Controlling: taking actions to remedy hold-ups
– Innovating: coming up with new solutions
– Representing: liaising with clients, users, developer,
suppliers and other stakeholders
Management control
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Management control
Data – the raw details
e.g. ‘6,000 documents processed at location X’
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Management control - continued
Modelling – working out the probable
outcomes of various decisions
e.g. if we employ two more staff at location X how
quickly can we get the documents processed?
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• Traditional versus modern project
management practices
– Planning incremental delivery
– Quality management
– Change management
Key points in lecture
• Projects are non-routine - thus uncertain
• The particular problems of projects e.g. lack of
visibility
• Clear objectives are essential which can be
objectively assessed
• Stuff happens. Not usually possible to keep precisely
plan – need for control
• Communicate, communicate, communicate!
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Important topics in course
• Cost-benefit evaluation
• Risk evaluation
• Activity planning
• Risk management
• Monitoring and control
• Contract management
• People management
Exercises
• Order on the basis of being project-like:
1. Producing an edition of a newspaper
2. Putting a robot vehicle on Mars to search for signs of life
3. Getting married
4. Amending a financial computer system to deal with a common
European currency
5. A research project into what makes a good human-computer
interface
6. An investigation into the reason why a user has a problem with a
computer system
7. A second-year programming assignment for a computing student
8. Writing an operating system for a new computer
9. Installing a new version of a word processing package in an
organization
Answer
• 2, 8, 4, 9, 6, 3, 5, 1, 7