Project Management Information System
Project Management Information System
MANAGEMENT
INFORMATION
SYSTEM
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INTRODUCTION TO PROJECT
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEM
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and gather feedback from stakeholders 4
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IMPORTANCE OF PMIS
The monitoring and control system of a project needs the support of a
suitable PMIS. Usually, the use of PMIS for all information about a project
and regularly updating this information based on the actual status: helps in
successful monitoring and control.
A comprehensive PMIS would cover the complete life-cycle of a project and
would provide the necessary support for decision making.
One important purpose of this information system is to receive the actual
data about the status of a project at pre-determined intervals, process this
information to evaluate the impact of these outcomes and project these
impacts in terms of an expected date of completion and an expected cost of
completion. This processed information is then made available to the project
manager and his team who would then use this to decide the necessary
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OBJECTIVES OF PMIS
Record and report relevant information and status of various
components of the project in such a manner as to bring the most critical
activities directly to the attention of concerned managers at appropriate
level.
Highlight deviations from the plan, if any, in respect of every component
of the project and also to indicate the effects of such deviations on the
overall status and completion of the project as a whole.
Form the basis of updating project schedule wherever necessary.
Identify and report on critical areas which are relevant to different levels
of management and to highlight the corrective action that needs to be
taken.
Sift the information and report on an exception basis. In other words,
emphasis is focused on those activities that are not going according the
plan.
Provide a basis for the evaluation of the performance of the functions of
various managers and departments by regular comparisons with
budgets/plans/schedules.
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FLEXIBILITY
Systems also vary widely in flexibility. Many systems are limited and
perform a narrow set of functions which cannot be modified.
Others allow the user to develop new applications or alter existing
ones depending on needs.
Among the potential additional applications and reports sometimes
available are change control, configuration management,
responsibility matrixes, expenditure reports, cost and technical
performance reports, and technical performance summaries.
Many software systems utilize internet technology and protocols that
enable easy access through a browser to a wide variety of
management applications and databases.
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EASE OF USE
How easy is it to learn and operate the systems?
Systems vary greatly in the style of system
documentation, thoroughness and clarify of tutorials,
ease of information input, clarify of on-screen
presentation and report format, helpfulness of error
messages, and the training and operating support
offered by the developer.
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Manual systems for large projects are tedious to maintain, difficult to access,
and provoke people to try to work around them or avoid them. They require the
efforts of numerous support personnel to maintain and use their outputs for
analysis.
In contrast, computer-based PMIS can perform much of this analysis, reduce
the requirement for clerical personnel, and relieve managers and support
personnel from having to do computations. This frees them to use analysis
results for making decisions.
The speed, capacity, and efficiency of computers afford still another benefit:
economy. In most cases, computers offer a significant cost advantage over
manual systems for storing and processing information. Assuming input data
are correct, computers produce fewer computational errors and reduce the cost
of correcting mistakes.
Computer-based PMIS are much better at handling and integrating complex
data relationships.
Large projects with thousands of work tasks, hundreds of organizations and
tens of thousands of workers cannot be managed efficiently without computers.
This is especially true of internet and intranet project management systems.
Computer-based PMIS store large amounts of information that is easily
accessed, prioritized, and summarized.
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PROJECT SCHEDULER
Project scheduler works with an SQL database and is MS office compatible.
Information from multiple projects or subprojects can be merged or consolidated
to reveal company wide resource utilization.
The report writer enables a wide range of standard and customized reports,
which can be output in HTML format.
Data can be located on shared disk drives and accessed only by users with the
appropriate password.
WELCOM
Welcom has three software products: open plan, cobra, and spider.
Open Plan has a advanced scheduling and modelling tools for resource
management.
It integrates company-wide information and enables information sharing across
multiple projects.
Team members can work on pieces of the project, then roll-up information for
composite reporting.
Cobra is a cost management tool designed to manage and analyze budgets,
earned value, and forecasts.
Spider is a multiuser, multi project web-based tool for viewing and updating
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project data from open plan user web browsers.
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TRAKKER
Trakker offers a variety of interesting products including tools for risk
management activity based costing, earned value management as well as
the usual planning, budgeting, and tracking tools.
These tools interface with commercial accounting systems and can be web
enabled for use on the internet or intranet with browsers.
PRIMAVERA
Primavera offers four software products.
SURE TRAK PROJECT MANAGER
This software enables modeling and scheduling of simultaneous projects of
up to 10,000 activities per project.
Activities can be inserted or rearranged on Gantt Charts and PERT charts
with a mouse click.
Actual completion dates and costs can be compared with targets, progress
estimated for each activity or for the entire project, and forecasts produced
of resources necessary to get a project back on track.
If resources exceed supply, Sure Trak can reassign them form low-priority
activities., assignments, deadlines, and status can be shared with project
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participants at all levels and locations using the web publisher.
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PRIMAVERA
Primavera Project Planner , (P3r)
This program provides for unlimited projects, up to 100,000 activities per project,
concurrent, multiuser accessibility, and scheduling options similar to Suretrak.
It can create fragments of networks to store for later use as templates or building
blocks for creating other project plans.
Also, it supports can be embedded into the project to automatically route status
information to individuals who need to know.
A web publisher enables team members with web browsers to review, update,
and return project activity status data.
WEB-BASED PMIS
A project web site and web-based project software are especially
helpful in situations where project team members are located at
different sites.
Putting project information in the internet or other networks utilizing
internet standards expedites projects that might ordinarily be
delayed because team members are dispersed.
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Web-based tools are easy to learn, understand, and use. Because the training
and learning required for web-based tools are minimal, team members can
concentrate on their job rather than spend time in training, or in trying to figure
out the software.
In most cases, the necessary tools are already at hand. Web-based software
requires one thing: access to a web browser, such as internet explorer or
Netscape, which is available on any computer with internet access.
Internet and intranet networks are easy to use and learn, and therefore team
members are likely to use them more frequently for status reporting.
Special website administration is unnecessary when team members, who enter-
up-to-date information, maintain their own sites.
Web based communication not only provides management with a current view
of projects, but it demands low overhead and frees management from worry
associated with system updates and maintenance.
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INTEGRATED PMIS
Structure of a typical integrated PMIS is depicted in figure.
It allows total project information to be structured into a number of data sets
which are integrated by the software. Some of the relevant datasets for a large
projects are:
Network dataset
Drawing data set
Cost data set
Material data set
Vendor data set
Job card data set
Rates data set
Resources data set
History data set, etc.
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INTEGRATED PMIS
What is Data?
Raw Material
Numbers and strings of letters with no precise context or meaning
What is Information?
What is Knowledge?
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Relevant
Complete
Accurate
Current/Timely
Economical
Accessible
IBM
Among the first to learn that PCs were revolutionizing the
computer industry.
Wal-Mart
“We got big by replacing inventory with information”
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What is a System?
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COMPONENTS OF System?
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COMPONENTS OF System?
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Closed System
Stands alone
No connection to other systems
Open System
Interfaces and interacts with other systems
Gets information from and provides
information to other systems
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Storage
FeedBack
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Role Of MIS
• The role of MIS in an organization can be compared to the role of heart
in the body.
• The information is the blood and MIS is the heart. In the body the heart
plays the role of supplying pure blood to all the elements of the body
including the brain.
• The MIS plays exactly the same role in the organization.
• The system ensures that an appropriate data is collected from the
various sources, processed, and sent further to all the needy
destinations.
• The system is expected to fulfill the information needs of an individual, a
group of individuals, the management functionaries: the managers and
the top management.
• The MIS satisfies the diverse needs through a variety of systems such
as Query Systems, Analysis Systems, Modeling Systems and Decision
Support Systems.
• The MIS helps in Strategic Planning, Management Control, Operational
Control and Transaction Processing.
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Features of MIS
• Timeliness
• Accuracy
• Consistency
• Completeness
• Relevance
Components of MIS
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Types Of MIS
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Elements of MIS
1. Hardware
2.Software
3. Control
4.Databases and application programs
5.People
6.Telecommunications and Networks
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Outputs Of a MIS
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Benefits of MIS
Component of Management IS
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Advantage of MIS
• All stakeholders in the company have access to one single database that
holds all the data that will be needed in day to day operations.
• Employees and other stakeholders in the organization will be able to spend
more time doing productive tasks.
• Another benefit of Management Information Systems is that they bring the
power of data processing tools that help significantly improve the quality of
decisions made in the company.
• Owing to the flexibility that is brought by the use of mobile devices such as
tablet computers and smartphones, Management Information Systems
ensure that employees have easier and closer interaction with information
about the progress of any process within the organization
• Management Information Systems help reduce the amount of
paperwork
• Reports make it easy for companies to easily identify their strengths
and weaknesses in carrying out various tasks
• From a top executive perspective, Management Information Systems
help give an overall impression of where the company stands
financially.
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• MIS helps eliminate redundant roles
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Thank you
Presenter name
Email address
Website address
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