Assignment #2 (59705)
Assignment #2 (59705)
Methodology
Assignment No. 2
Name : Danish Ansari
ID : 59705
Submitted to : Fiasal Masood
Step 1: Vision
Once you have the vision clear, then you can break it down
into more practical bits.
Objective. List three to five objectives of the project, be
SMART: specific, measurable, achievable, realistic and time
bound.
Scope. Now outline the formal boundaries of the project by
describing how the business may change or alter by
delivery of your project, also note what’s relevant to the
project and what is not. This is how you maintain better
control of the project.
Deliverables. Describe each of the deliverables the project is
tasked to produce. Once you’ve gotten all of them down,
you’ve got a foothold on your charter and are ready to
move on.
Step 2: Organize
When you’re building a structure for your charter there are
four subsets you’re going to need to identify. This is done
by listing the following:
Customers/End Users. To complete this list, ask yourself:
What is a customer and/or end user in the context of this
project? Who are the project customers? Is there a specific
individual or entity responsible for accepting the
deliverables of the project?
Stakeholders. As noted earlier, identifying the stakeholders
of the project is crucial. They are the person or entity
within or outside of the project with a specific key interest
in that project. It might be a financial controller overseeing
costs or the CEO, but whoever it is they’ll have a slightly
different focus depending on their role.
Roles. You need to assign the key roles and responsibilities
to those involved in delivering the project, from the project
sponsor, project board and project manager. After each
entry write a short summary defining their role and what
their responsibilities are in the project.
Structure. Now you need to define the lines of reporting
between these various roles in the project. Use a project
organization chart to do this. It diagrams the structure of
an organization and the relationships and roles of those
involved in the project.
Step 3: Implementation
You have a vision and have organized the various parts of
your project. Now you have to develop a plan to implement
them. There are four parts to this:
Plan. If you’re going to implement, then you need an
implementation plan. This is a way to develop an
atmosphere of confidence for your customers and
stakeholders by listing the phases, activities and
timeframes of the project’s life cycle. Gantt charts are the
traditional planning tool for projects. They turn your tasks
and deadlines into visual
timelines. ProjectManager.com has an online Gantt chart
that lets you assign tasks, track progress in real time, drag
and drop due dates, create phases, make dependencies
and more.