GIT - Project Management
GIT - Project Management
Course Outline
• Understanding Project Management Fundamentals
• Identifying Project Management Processes
• Initiating a Project
• Managing Project Scope
• Estimating Project Time
• Developing and Controlling a Project Schedule
• Analyzing Project Cost
• Measuring Project Quality
• Organizing Human Resources for a Project
• Devising Effective Communication Methods
• Analyzing Project Risks
• Processing Project Procurements
• Integrating Project Workflow
• Understanding Project Management Fundamentals
• Define Project Management Basics
• Examine Organizational Influences on Project Management
• Examine the Project Management Context
Projects
Project: A temporary work endeavor.
Has a clearly defined beginning and end.
Example: Creating a new car that works on solar energy.
Subprojects
An independently manageable component of an existing project.
Can have smaller subprojects.
Subprojects can be contracted:
External enterprise.
Another functional unit in the organization.
Example: Creating interior design for a solar powered car.
Subprojects contracted to vendors:
Designing of seats.
Air-conditioning system.
Project Management
“The application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities to meet project requirements.”
(According to the PMI®)
Managing projects typically involves:
• Scheduling.
• Identifying requirements.
• Establishing objectives.
• Balancing quality, scope, time, and cost.
• Addressing the concerns and expectations of the stakeholders.
Example: Project manager responsibilities at the launch of a new telecommunication network include:
Communicate cross-functionally.
Manage people who do not report directly.
Deliver the work on time, within specified budget and quality specifications.
Strategic Planning
Projects are often used as the means of achieving the organization's strategic plan.
Strategic considerations that authorize a project include:
• Market demands.
• Organizational needs.
• Customer requests.
• Technological advancements.
• Legal requirements.
Programs
A group of related projects that have a common objective.
Offer great control over constituent projects and deliver benefits that the organization can use to meet its goals.
Example: A company expanding its retail chain.
Projects include:
• Conducting market research to establish demand.
• Constructing new stores.
• Selecting franchise.
• Designing the marketing campaign.
• Consolidating customer base by establishing loyalty programs.
Portfolios
A collection of projects, programs, and other work to achieve the strategic business objectives of an organization.
Generally managed by a senior manager or senior management teams.
Example: An alternate energy producing company designing a breakthrough technology capitalizing on solar
energy.
The portfolio includes:
Programs and projects to identify potential use of technology.
Operational work such as administration and logistics related activities.
Operations
Are ongoing and repetitive tasks that produce the same outcome every time they are performed.
Purpose of operations includes:
• Carrying out day-to-day organizational functions.
• Generating income to sustain the business.
• Increasing the value of organizational assets.
• Example: Operations in a new oil refinery.
Operations includes:
• Daily production.
• Routine maintenance of the plant.
• Employees wages.
• Purchase of raw materials.
• Grievance-handling.
• Logistics.
• Supply of finished products to the market.
PMO
A centralized, permanent, ongoing administrative unit or department that serves to improve project management
performance within an organization.
Example: The automobile company needs to manage the entire project of designing a solar car in a coordinated
way.
PMO introduced standardized processes for:
Calculating, leveling, loading, and developing project budgets.
Updating project schedules.
Developing project data references.
Organizing best practices sharing sessions.
Project Stakeholders
Person who has a business interest in the outcome of a project or who is actively involved in its work.
Example: The automobile company decided to start the solar car plant in a new location. Stakeholders include:
Project manager and project sponsor.
Government automobile regulatory agency officials, staff.
Employees of the company, management, and production team.
Company’s vendors, local environmental and political groups, and residents.
Organizational Structures
Dictates how the various groups and individuals within an organization interrelate.
CEO
CFO CIO VP HR
Employee Employee
Employee
Organization Charts
A visual representation of the project’s organizational structure.
Clearly assigns project tasks to team members.
A functional organization chart
Program Management
Centralized, coordinated process.
Managing multiple related and interdependent projects.
Meet strategic objectives.
Example: The program manager at a retailing company identified the various projects for the retail chain
expansion.
Assigned a priority level to each project.
Decided to conduct market research.
Portfolio Management
Managing programs and independent projects.
Gives senior management a collective oversight of a grouping of projects in alignment with the strategic goals of
the organization.
Example: Senior management of an automobile company overseeing
several unrelated projects.
Operations Management
The management of resources and processes involved in producing and delivering products and services.
Ensures that business operations are efficient and effective.
Ensures that quality of goods or services are optimal.
Aligned with the business and organizational requirements.
Example: Operations management in a new oil refinery.
Management activities include:
Defining the processes and procedures to be followed.
Identifying best practices to be followed.
Managing daily production activities.
Administering plant maintenance, wages, and salary.
Ensuring that work is in line with the current organizational strategies and procedures.
Project Governance
Methodology carried throughout the life cycle of a project.
Contains project phase reviews.
Management review is done at the start of every phase.
Progressive Elaboration
Successive layers of detail are added to the plans.
Deliverables from one phase are approved before work begins on the next phase.
A phase may begin before approving the deliverables of a previous phase if risks are acceptable.
Provides greater level of detail as the project progresses.
Detail is added to plans in progressive elaboration
Detail is added to plans in progressive elaboration
The
project management processes
Involves defining the need for a new project or the new phase of an existing
Initiating
project, and obtaining a commitment to move forward.
Used to create the project scope, refine objectives, and develop a strategy to
Planning
accomplish the work in the project or phase.
Involves carrying out the work mentioned in the project management plan in
Executing
order to meet project specifications.
Initiating Planning
Processes Processes
Monitoring
and Executing
Controlling Processes
Processes
Closing
Processes
Initiating a Project
• Examine Project Selection
• Prepare a Project Statement of Work
• Create a Project Charter
• Identify the Elements of a Project Management Plan
Collect Requirements
Project Scope Verify Scope
Define Scope
Management Control Scope
Create WBS
Define Activities
Sequence Activities
Estimate Activity
Project Time
Resources Control Schedule
Management
Estimate Activity
Durations
Develop Schedule
Acquire Project
Team
Project Human
Develop Human Develop Project
Resource
Resource Plan Team
Management
Manage Project
Team
Distribute
Project
Information
Communications Identify Stakeholders Plan Communications Report Performance
Manage Stakeholder
Management
Expectations
Project
Conduct Administer Close
Procurement Plan Procurements
Procurements Procurements Procurements
Management
• Organizational needs
• Customer requests
• Technological advances
• Legal requirements
• Social needs
System Description
Capital Budgeting
Method of quantitative analysis.
Helps senior executives make determinations about when and whether to make significant investments in capital
expenditures such as:
New equipment
Machinery
Facilities
Weighted factor Different criteria may be weighted and scored for comparison.
Experts are located remotely and remain anonymous, yet participate in group decision making.
elphi technique
Consensus is achieved through group ranking.
Feasibility Analysis
An analysis that provides technical and operational data to management to make a decision about project selection.
Includes:
Problem description.
Summary of historical data.
Evaluation of available technologies.
Evaluation of organization’s technical capabilities.
Cost and time estimates.
Assumptions and constraints.
Recommendations.
Statement of project goals and milestones.
Example: Feasibility analysis in a fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) company.
Data taken for analysis are:
Historical data.
Financial and economic data.
Requirements analysis.
Summary of the additional costs.
Summary of impacts.
A conclusion.
Cost-Benefit Analysis
A comparison of the estimated costs versus the predicted benefits of a project.
Helps decision makers make informed choices about project selection.
Example: The CEO of a consumer goods company requested their advertisement agency to come up with the
estimated production and
publishing cost of the campaign.
The rough cost estimates are:
Predicted cost = $150K.
Predicted increase in sales: 10% of $4 million = $400K.
Predicted net benefit = $250K.
Project Charters
A document that provides a clear, concise description of the business needs that the project is intended to address.
Project charter for the OGC PM Training Roll-Out project
Business Cases
A document that:
Justifies investments made for a project.
Describes how a particular investment is in accordance to the organization's policy.
Example: Business case for a geothermal energy project.
The business case includes:
Technical, investment, and regulatory factors influencing the project.
Cost estimates to justify the investments made for the project.
Project contribution Determines the project's contribution toward the organization's objectives.
Lists the project stakeholders, their expectations, and contribution toward the
Stakeholders
project.
Strategic risks Lists the risks that the project may face and the possible risk management measures.
Project roles Lists the members of the project team and their respective job roles in the project.
Facilitated Workshops
Are group sessions that:
Bring together key multidisciplinary or cross functional stakeholders.
Define the project or product requirements for the project.
Example: Conducting facilitated workshops for OGC's Warehouse Management Software project.
Stakeholders include:
Staff of the Process Development and Implementation department.
Key project managers.
Administration personnel.
Key PMO staff.
Chief of the Business Transformation team.
Discussions highlight the stakeholder differences.
Enables reconciliation of the stakeholder differences.
Requirements Documentation
Describes how individual requirements meet the business requirements of the project.
The requirements documented must be:
• Unambiguous
• Traceable
• Complete
• Consistent
• Acceptable to key stakeholders
Maps to
project
scope
statement
Subdivide
s
project
work into
smaller
pieces
Code of Accounts
• Any system for numbering the elements in a WBS.
• Helpful in performance, reporting, cost.
Example: School district’s uniform code of accounts.
• Record, track, document
• Revenues and expenditures
• Consistent in every school
Activities
• Element of project work that requires an action to produce a deliverable.
• Have an expected duration.
• Consume budget and/or human resources.
• Are named in verb-noun format.
Example: Activities in a company project.
Revise user manual.
Make a sales presentation.
Reserve conference room.
Work Package
Planned work or deliverables.
Lowest-level component of the work breakdown structure.
Cost and schedule can be easily estimated.
Lead
Project Resources
Any useful material object or person needed for project completion.
Include labor, materials, facilities, equipment, consultants, services, supplies, and utilities.
Example: Resources for a health and wellness seminar project.
Conference room.
Brochures, pamphlets, other materials.
Visiting consultants.
Vendors.