Project Management
Project Management
All living things have a life cycle. They are born, grow, wane, and die. This is true for
human being, for the products we buy and sell, for our organizations, and for our
projects as well.
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Cont’d…..
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What is a Project Cycle?
What is a project cycle and why?
• A project life cycle is the series (collection) of sequential phases that a project
passes through from its initiation to its closure. The phases are generally sequential
when projects are planned and carried out.
(Project Management Institute, 2013)
These phases constitutes what is often called “the project cycle”
• The number of project phases is determined by the control needs of the project
organization.
A project goes through various planning phases before it is actually realized.
The project cycle considers various stages.
• Each stage comes out of the preceding activities, and also leads into subsequent
ones.
• A self-renewing cycle: new projects may grow out of the old ones in a continuous
process and self- sustaining cycle of activity.
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A Project cycle cont’d…
• The project life represents the linear progression of a project, from defining the
project, through developing a plan, implementing the plan and closing the project.
A project life cycle usually specifies:
1) The technical work that must be carried out in various phases of the project.
2) The list of individuals and their roles in each phase of the project.
The life cycle recognizes that projects have a limited life span and that there are
predictable changes in level of effort and focus over the life of the project.
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A Project cycle Con’t…
• Projects vary in size and complexity. All projects can be mapped to the following
generic life cycle structure (PMI,2013)
Starting the project, Organizing and preparing, Carrying out the project work, and
Closing the project.
• The project life cycle typically passes sequentially through four stages: defining
(initiation), planning, executing, and delivering (closure) ( Gray and Larson, 2011)
• The starting point begins the moment the project is given the go-ahead. Project
effort starts slowly, builds to a peak, and then declines to delivery of the project to
the customer.
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Why project cycle?
• In practice, the project life cycle is used by some project groups to depict the
timing of major tasks over the life of the project so that emphasis is scaled up at
each phase by the concerned project teams.
• Dividing project life cycle into phases helps to have better management and control
of a project.
• Project life cycle is important to decide the type of resource to be allocated and
degree of control exercised at the each phase of the cycle.
• B/c it is a methodology for the preparation, implementation and evaluation of
projects based on the principles of the logical framework approach
• B/c it describes management activities and decision-making procedures used
during the life cycle of a project (key tasks, roles and responsibilities, key
documents and decision options)
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Framework: Project Cycle
Concept
Thesis proposal)
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Basic models of Project Cycle (PC)
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The Baum project cycle (World Bank PC)
Baum's six stage process through which, practically, every major project passes
through are: Identification, Preparation, Appraisal, Presentation, Implementation
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and Evaluation.
Baum Model- Identification Phase
Is the first stage in the cycle – it is searching for and identifying potentially feasible projects.
This is just finding the project. A stage where one project-idea is chosen and defined out of
several alternatives.
• Most projects start as an elementary idea. Sources include:
Resource-based project ideas – opportunity to make profitable use of available
resources.
Market-based project ideas– arising from identified demand in home or overseas
markets.
Need-based project ideas– to fulfill certain basic material requirements and services
(unsatisfied needs).
Technical specialists- may identify areas with technical deficiencies
Local leaders-may provide information about existing problems and bottlenecks.
Proposals to extend and/or expand existing programs/projects.
Identifying technological alternatives
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Baum Model - Preparation/Formulation Phase
• Once projects are identified, then more detailed analysis of the projects and
preparation of the project plans are formulated.
• At this stage, the defined idea is carefully developed to the preparation stage
that include both the pre-feasibility and feasibility study
• Is the stage at which the project is being seriously considered as a definite
investment action (Does it have merit?)
• The feasibility studies cover all the technical, economic, social, financial,
institutional and environmental feasibility analyses
• Business plan and a project timetable is established during preparation.
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Baum Model - Appraisal and Selection Phase
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Cont’d
• The appraisal process builds on the project plan. The appraisal team may seek additional/new information if
they feel some of the data used or
assumptions made in the stage of preparation are faulty.
Appraisals should cover at least 7 major aspects of a project (that are given special considerations during the
preparation phase):
• Technical: verifying whether what is proposed will work in the way suggested or not.
ensures that projects are soundly designed, appropriately engineered, and follow acceptable standards.
The appraisal mission looks into technical alternatives considered, solutions proposed, and expected results.
Technical questions: Is the project/dam soundly designed and engineered? Does it meet acceptable
standards? Will it displace local people? Will it affect the env’t?
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Cont’d..
• Financial: Ensure that there are sufficient funds to implement the project. See if
the requirements for money needed by the project have been calculated properly,
their sources are allied if identified, and reasonable plans for their repayment are
made where necessary.
Financial questions: Is the borrower's financial plan sound? Is the project
financially viable? Is the proposed accounting system adequate?
• Commercial: examine arrangements for acquisition of inputs and disposal
(marketing) of the products.
• Incentive: examine whether the project is in the best interest of all the
participants( stakeholders).
• Economic: verify project’s soundness from the viewpoint of the national economic
development interest, examine whether the benefits outweigh the costs, whether
it provides job opportunities for local people, examine the estimated rate of return
on the investment?
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Cont’d
• Managerial: examine if capacity exists for operating the project, see if those
responsible ones can operate it satisfactorily and are given sufficient power and
scope to do what is required.
• Organizational: examine if the project is organized internally and externally into
units, contract, policy, institution, etc.
To allow the proposals to be carried out properly, and
Allow for change as the project develops
The implications (or impacts) of the project on the society and the environment are
also more thoroughly investigated and documented.
• These issues are the subjects of specialized appraisal report.
– Based on the appraisal report, decisions made whether to go ahead with the
project or not.
– The appraisal may also change the basic project plan or develop a new plan.
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Cont’d
– Comments given at this stage frequently give rise to alterations in the project
plan (project proposal).
– Some projects may be discarded.
• Viable projects chosen for implementation after appraisal on the basis of the
priorities of stakeholders and available resources pass to the next stage.
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Baum Model – Negotiation and Financing Phase
• Detailed plan is submitted for approval and financing to the appropriate entities. Then
negotiations are made which is the process of give and take on both sides of the table
Once the project to be implemented is agreed on, discussions are held on funding and
associated aspects of funding.
– Conditions for grants,
– Repayment period (for loans),
– Interest rates on loans,
– Flow of funds,
– Contributions from stakeholders, and
– Whether there is co-financing or not.
This culminates into an “Agreement Document”– binds all the parties involved in the
implementation of the project.
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Baum Model – Implementation and Supervision Phase
• This is a stage where the project plan is implemented, of course after the necessary
approvals and financing decisions are made. This is just getting it started
• Is the most important part of the project cycle
Funds actually disbursed to get the project started and keep running.
• Major priority: accomplishing the project in accordance with the basic plan (within cost,
quality, safety and time standards).
• The following are usually observed at this stage:
– Problems frequently occur as the economic and financial environment during
implementation often differ from the expectations at the time of appraisal.
– Many of the real problems of projects are faced at this stage
– Deficiencies in the capabilities of the project actor can be revealed.
– Original proposals frequently modified, though with difficulty, because of the need
to get agreement between the parties involved.
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Cont’d
• Recording, monitoring, and progress reporting should be integral parts.
– Allows the management to be aware of the difficulties that might arise.
• All the above is possible through supervision which helps to ensure that projects are
executed according to their plan so as to achieve their objectives.
• Relevant aspects of implementation to project planning and analysis:
– A better and more realistic project plan can be carried out or realized easily (or
with little difficulty)
– Emphasizes the need for careful attention to each of the seven aspects of
projects.
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Cont’d
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Baum Model - Evaluation Phase
• This is done at every stage where the progress of the project is assessed against
the plan. This phase is important to determine the overall success or failure of
the project
Final phase in the project cycle - it is useful (though not always done).
– Once a project has been carried out, it is often useful, to look back over
what took place,
– To compare actual progress with the plans,
– To judge whether the decisions and actions taken were corrective,
– To see whether the results obtained are optimal in a sense that the
resources are efficiently utilized and whether the project’s goals and
objectives are effectively achieved
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Cont’d
• Different bodies or units may do the evaluation of projects.
– Project’s management unit
– Sponsoring agency (the operating ministry, planning agency, or an external assistant
agency).
• A separate evaluation unit (especially for large and innovative projects) might be organized
for:
– Monitoring the projects' implementation,
– Bringing problems to the attention of the project’s management.
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The UNIDO Project Cycle
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Cont’d
• Support or functional studies are part of the project preparation stage conducted
separately, where its findings are later incorporated in a pre-feasibility or feasibility study
as appropriate.
• Covers critical aspects of an investment project, and are required as prerequisites for or
in support of pre-feasibility and feasibility studies, particularly for large-scale investment
proposals
• When a project idea is determined to be feasible with regard to its critical aspect, a full-
fledged study may be commissioned. If not, further studies such as pre-feasibility and
feasibility studies will be halted.
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Cont’d Support /Functional Studies
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Cont’d
I. OPPORTUNITY STUDIES
• This is a study made to identify and come up with possible profitable project
proposition
• Opportunity study is the main instrument used to quantify the parameters,
information and data required to develop a project idea into a proposal.
• Identification of investment opportunities is the starting point in
a series of investment related activities.
– Provides information on available investment opportunities
– Is rather sketchy in nature and depend more on aggregate/crude
estimates than on detailed cost- benefits analysis.
• The purpose of such a study are:
– primarily to highlight the principal investment aspects of a possible
industrial proposition with out involving any substantial cost
– to arrive at a quick and inexpensive determination of salient
facts of an investment possibility.
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Cont’d
The opportunity study should analyze:
• Natural resources,
• Environmental impacts ,
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Cont’d
Opportunity studies could be general or specific.
• General opportunity studies(“sector approach”). Divided in to three:
– Area studies– designed to identify opportunities on a given area
(Administrative province, backward region, etc);
– Industry studies– designed to identify opportunities in delimited
industrial branch; and
– Resource-based studies– designed to reveal opportunities based on the
utilization of natural, agricultural, or industrial resources.
• Specific project opportunity studies (“enterprise approach”)- These studies
should follow the initial identification of general investment opportunities in
the form of products with potential for domestic manufacturing.
• Should be defined as the transformation of a project idea into a broad
investment proposition with the objective to stimulate investor response
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Cont’d
Opportunity studies are usually conducted by federal, local government units
such as investment offices, an investment promotion agency, a financing
agency, municipality or non governmental organization such as chamber of
commerce or other private organization
Check with Ethiopian Investment Commission (EIC) website for the list of
investment opportunity studies :www.investethiopia.gov.et
You can also check websites of the regional investment bureaus and chamber
of commerce
IMPORTANT
Where a project opportunity study is undertaken by a national or
international investment promotion or financing agency to develop
entrepreneurial interest, the prefeasibility study has to be carried out as and
when entrepreneurial response is forthcoming.
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II. Pre-Feasibility Studies
• The project idea elaborated in a more detailed study.
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Cont’d
• Pre-feasibility study should cover review of the various alternatives identified in the
following main fields (components) of the study/project:
* Project background and scope of project (basic ideas or strategies)
* Market analysis and marketing concept
* Raw materials and supplies
* Location, site and environment
* Engineering and technology
* Organization and overhead costs
* Human resources and training requirements and costs
* Project implementation, schedule and budgeting
* Financial analysis and investment appraisal
This study should assess the financial and economic impact of each of the above-
mentioned factors.
• This processes can be bypassed if a well-prepared and comprehensive opportunity
study is conducted.
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III. Feasibility Studies
• A detailed study of projects that provides all data necessary for an investment
decision. It consists of detailed studies on
– Commercial, technical, financial, economic, and environmental analyis
– This would critically examine the alternative solutions already reviewed in the
pre-feasibility study.
– A project whose background conditions and aims have been clearly defined in
terms of its central objective and possible marketing strategies,
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Cont’d
– Larger projects require more complex information.
• An industrial investment project must be worked out with the greatest accuracy in an
iterative optimization process, with feedback and inter-linkages, including the
identification of commercial, technical, and entrepreneurial risks.
– More closely examine sensitive parameters– size of the market, the production
program, or the mechanical equipment's selected.
• Carry out feasibility studies only if the necessary financing
facilities can be obtained with a fair degree of accuracy.
– Reliable assurance of funding – pre-requisite for the study.
– Possible project financing must be considered as early as the feasibility study
stage.
– Financing conditions have direct effects on total costs and the financial feasibility
of the project
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IV. APPRIASAL REPORT
• When a feasibility study is completed, the various parties will carry out their own
appraisal of the investment project in accordance with their individual:
– Objectives,
– Evaluation of expected risks, costs, and gains.
• Large investment and development finance institutions have
a formalized project appraisal procedure and usually prepare appraisal reports.
• This is an independent stage of the pre-investment phase,
marked by the final investment and financing decisions taken
by the project promoters.
• The appraisal report will prove whether the pre- production ( feasibility study)
expenditures spent since the initiation of the project idea were well spent or not.
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Cont’d
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B. The Investment/Implementation Phase
• This phase provides wide scope for consultancy and engineering work,
primarily in the field of project management.
• Comprises the following stages:
– Establishing the legal, financial, and organizational framework for the
implementation of the project;
– Technology acquisition and transfer;
– Detailed engineering design and contracting including tendering,
evaluation of bids, and negotiations;
– Acquisition of land, construction work, and installation;
– Pre-production marketing, including the securing of supplies and suppliers
and setting up the administration of the firm;
– Recruitment and training of personnel; and
– Plant commissioning and start-up.
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UNIDO operational Phase
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UNIDO Operational Phase…
• The long-term view relates to chosen strategies and the associated production
and marketing costs as well as sales revenues.
– These have a direct relationship with the projections made at the pre-
investment phase.
– If such strategies and projections prove faulty, any remedial measures will not
only be difficult but may prove highly expensive.
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The DEPSA Model
In Ethiopia, Development Project Studies Authority (DEPSA) made certain efforts and
developed a model for Project cycle.
1. Pre-investment phase
2. Investment and
3. Operation
1. Pre- investment Phase
a. Identification Stage
b. Formulation Stage
Pre-feasibility study
Feasibility study
c. Appraisal
Appraisal
Decision
2. Investment Phase
Implementation
3. Operation Phase
Operation & Ex-post evaluation 43