Project Development
Project Development
The key challenge with a matrix organization is that every employee has two (or
more) managers they report to, their Functional Manager and the Project Manager.
If they are working on multiple projects, they may have even more managers to
report to.
Control uses the monitored data to bring actual performance into agreement with the plan
Monitoring and Control are the opposite sides of project selection (which dictates what to
monitor) and planning (which identifies the elements to be controlled)
Controlling
Project Control • Control is the last element in the implementation cycle of
planning-monitoring-controlling
Elements of Control
Control is focused on three elements of a project
• Performance • Cost • Time
Controlling Performance
There are several things that can cause a project’s performance to require
control:
Unexpected technical problems arise
Insufficient resources are available when needed
Insurmountable technical difficulties are present
Quality or reliability problems occur
Client requires changes in specifications
Interfunctional complications arise
• Technological breakthroughs affect the project
Controlling Cost
There are several things that can cause a project’s cost to require control:
Technical difficulties require more resources
The scope of the work increase
Initial bids were too low
Reporting was poor or untimely
Budgeting was inadequate
Corrective control was not exercised in time
Input price changes occurred
Controlling Time
There are several things that can cause a project’s schedule to require control
Technical difficulties took longer than planned to resolve
Initial time estimates were optimistic
Task sequencing was incorrect
Required inputs of material, personnel, or equipment were
unavailable when needed
Necessary preceding tasks were incomplete
Customer generated change orders required rework
Governmental regulations were altered
Purposes of Control
• There are two fundamental objectives of control:
• 1. The regulation of results through the alteration of activities
• 2. The stewardship of organizational assets
• The project manager needs to be equally attentive to both regulation and
conservation
• The project manager must guard the physical assets of the organization, its
human resources, and its financial resources
Customer satisfaction.
Business/Direct success.
Future potential.
Direct Goals of the project ignores many costs & benefits to the project, team
members, parent organization.
Identify the project personnel who have high potential for managerial
leadership.
Lack of trust.
Six Parts -
Future status.
Risk assessment.
Baseline Definition
Audit Termination
Disbanding of team
Construction & use of the Audit Report
Communication device.
Introduction
Schedule
Progress/Earned Value
Quality
A Pareto approach
Risk Management
Appendices
Termination
A project Termination –
when work on the substance of the project has ceased or slowed to the point that
further progress is no longer possible
• A Project life – Each and every project has a beginning and ending.
• Nature of Problems and cause to: Nature Cause to Easily solved Successful completion
Bye-passed Ceased Lived Delayed / slowed Ignored Replaced / better alternative
Reason of Termination: –
Poor planning and risk management –
Uncertainty of environment –
Lack of Resources –
Corporate merger –
Political Assassination –
Varieties of termination
Termination by extinction:
– Successful:
• objectives met
– Unsuccessful:
• say no to bye
• Environment dynamics
• Termination by Addition
–While the project goes away, project personnel and assets are transferred to the new
business
• Termination by Integration
• Termination by Starvation:
Goal/Objective-based
or
Qualification factors
–If terminate:
Planned Orderly
Procedures vary