Principles of Project Design and Management Moving from Program to Project in 3 Easy Chapters.

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Presentation transcript:

Principles of Project Design and Management Moving from Program to Project in 3 Easy Chapters

Projects and Programs: Key Terms Chapter 1

What Is a Project? A temporary endeavor undertaken to accomplish a well defined purpose A project… –Is temporary –Require resources, often from various areas –Has a primary sponsor and stakeholders –Involves uncertainty –Is linked to a program by virtue of a shared strategic objective

Project #1 Project #2 Project #3 Project #4 Strategic Ojective #1 Program Programs and Projects Projects are linked to the program through a shared strategic objective

Project Design: Key Issues Chapter 2

1Description of the need you plan to address 2How will people benefit? 3What activities will take place? 4Why are these activities justified? 5How, where and for how long will the project operate? 6How will it be staffed and managed? 7How will success be measured? 8How much will it cost? A Project Design

Typical Project Document Format Statement of Need Monitoring/ Evaluation Plan Budget Implementation Plan Strategic Objective & Key Results Project Description Methodology Rationale Management Plan

Powerful Interventions: Relating Problem Causes to Activities Chapter 3

Pareto Principle Only a few causal streams that lead to a problem are responsible for the bulk of the problem Example: “90% of repeated violent crimes are caused by 5% of the population” Example: “80% of the yield reduction is caused by two major plant pests”

Getting the Greatest Bang for the Buck Frequency distribution noted by Vilfredo Pareto He observed the 80/20 rule –80% of a problem’s effects come from 20 % of the possible causes Principle used to identify high leverage interventions

Pareto Principle: Example In Country X, the problem of decreasing farm family income was investigated through the use of a survey of 100 households. 65 households mentioned the primary cause as the lack of resources (access to land, irrigation, inputs) to support production, 20 households mentioned lack of access to markets to sell their goods, and 15 identified their lack of knowledge of improved farming practices as the primary cause of a decreasing farm family income.

Pareto Principle: Implications Critical causal pathways must be identified during design A good project is one that addresses those causes that explain most of the problem Causal pathway analysis and application of the Pareto Principle can improve project cost-effectiveness

Non-Causal Factors to Consider When Selecting Problems The degree to which resolution of the problem will result in a fundamental change in the lives of the target group The significance and scope of the problem (i.e., the degree to which society considers it a serious problem and the number of people affected by it) The identification by the affected community that this is a priority problem Fit with organizational mission, resources and priorities Availability of “quick win” opportunities Amenability of problem to affordable solution strategies

Sustainability Factors to Consider When Designing Projects Stakeholder engagement and ownership Presence or absence of enabling environment including policy support Appropriate technology Environmental suitability Sociocultural fit Institutional and management capacity (public and private) Economic and financial viability

Scale-Up Issues to Consider When Designing Projects What is the optimal number of participating individuals or communities in order to achieve profound impact? What quality controls are needed to ensure that dilution of quality does not occur when project expands? What is an enabling environment for this project; how can it be created and sustained? What can be done to make“best practice” become common practice?

Keys to Successful Scale-Up Specify core elements of the project and replicate these faithfully Encourage local adaptation and ownership Pursue sufficient spread to make a difference Plan to reach the tipping point where benefits can be sustained without continuous intervention

Unpacking Scale and Sustainability In 6 Images

Unpacking Scale and Sustainability Focus

Unpacking Scale and Sustainability Challenges

Unpacking Scale and Sustainability Focus

Unpacking Scale and Sustainability The Payoff

Unpacking Scale and Sustainability Prerequisites

Unpacking Scale and Sustainability The Big Picture

Principles of Project Design and Management Moving from Program to Project in 3 Easy Chapters The End