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Introduction to Project Management

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1 Introduction to Project Management
Chapter One Introduction to Project Management

2 Chapter Objectives Understand the Importance of Projects and Project Management. Define Projects and discuss project constraints Define Project Management and its Importance for doing business nowadays. Introduce Project Management Knowledge Areas. Introduce Project Life Cycle. Understand the Importance of Project management Integration. Week 1: Modern Project Management

3 Week 1: Modern Project Management What is a Project?
Project Defined A complex, nonroutine, one-time effort limited by time, budget, resources, and performance specifications designed to meet customer needs. A project is a temporary endeavor undertaken to accomplish a unique purpose. “An activity with a fixed start and end point, managed with finite resources, involving change and often achieved by the collective effort of the team of people” “A project is a sequence of unique, complex, and connected activities. Having one goal or purpose that must be completed by a specific time, within budget, and according to specification” (Artto, 2002) Week 1: Modern Project Management

4 Attributes of Projects
Major Characteristics of a Project (Attributes) Importance: The most crucial attribute of a project is that it must be important enough in the eyes of senior management to justify setting up a special organizational unit outside the routine structure of the organization. Uniqueness: has an established objective (unique purpose). Involves doing something never been done before. Defined Life Cycle: Has a defined life span with a beginning and an end (temporary). Performance: A project is usually a one-time activity with a well-defined set of desired end results. Has specific time, cost, and performance requirements. Week 1: Modern Project Management

5 Attributes of Projects
Major Characteristics of a Project (Attributes) Interdependencies: Projects often interact with other projects being carried out simultaneously by their parent organization. Require across-the-organizational participation (require resources from different areas). Conflict: Projects compete with functional departments and other projects for resources and personnel. Conflicts between customers and the project team over requirements. Conflicts within the project team over approach and process. Conflicts between the project manager and his/her management over cost and schedule. Conflicts between project managers and other managers on who controls the resources that the project manager needs. should have a primary sponsor and/or customer involve uncertainty Week 1: Modern Project Management

6 Comparison of Routine Work with Projects
Routine, Repetitive Work Taking class notes Daily entering sales receipts into the accounting ledger Responding to a supply-chain request Practicing scales on the piano Routine manufacture of an Apple iPod Attaching tags on a manufactured product Projects Writing a term paper Setting up a sales kiosk for a professional accounting meeting Developing a supply-chain information system Writing a new piano piece Designing an iPod that is approximately 2 X 4 inches, interfaces with PC, and stores 10,000 songs Wire-tag projects for GE and Wal-Mart Week 1: Modern Project Management

7 Three Major Constraints
Every project is constrained in different ways by its Scope goals: What is the project trying to accomplish? Time goals: How long should it take to complete? Cost goals: What should it cost? It is the project manager’s duty to balance these three often competing goals Week 1: Modern Project Management

8 Three Major Constraints
Week 1: Modern Project Management

9 Programs versus Projects
Program Defined A series of coordinated, related, multiple projects that continue over an extended time and are intended to achieve a goal. A higher level group of projects targeted at a common goal. Program: “A group of related projects managed in a coordinated way to obtain benefits and control not available from managing them individually.”* Process – a series of steps needed to perform a routine activity (e.g. purchasing). A project may contain many processes. *PMI, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide) Week 1: Modern Project Management

10 Programs versus Projects
Week 1: Modern Project Management

11 What is Project Management?
Project management is “the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities in order to meet project requirements” (PMI*, Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK Guide), 2000, p. 6) *The Project Management Institute (PMI) is an international professional society. Their web site is Week 1: Modern Project Management

12 Project Management Framework
Week 1: Modern Project Management

13 Project Stakeholders Stakeholders are the people involved in or affected by project activities Stakeholders include Project sponsor Project manager Project team Support staff Customers Users Suppliers Opponents to the project Week 1: Modern Project Management

14 9 Project Management Knowledge Areas
Knowledge areas describe the key competencies that project managers must develop 4 core knowledge areas lead to specific project objectives (scope, time, cost, and quality) 4 facilitating knowledge areas are the means through which the project objectives are achieved (human resources, communication, risk, and procurement management 1 knowledge area (project integration management) affects and is affected by all of the other knowledge areas Week 1: Modern Project Management

15 Project Management Tools and Techniques
Project management tools and techniques assist project managers and their teams in various aspects of project management Some specific ones include Project Charter and WBS (scope) Gantt charts, network diagrams, critical path analysis, critical chain scheduling (time) Cost estimates and earned value management (cost) Week 1: Modern Project Management

16 Project Portfolio Management
Many organizations support an emerging business strategy of project portfolio management: Organizations group and manage projects as a portfolio of investments that contribute to the entire enterprise’s success. Week 1: Modern Project Management

17 Major Functions of Portfolio Management
Oversee project selection. Monitor aggregate resource levels and skills. Encourage use of best practices. Balance projects in the portfolio in order to represent a risk level appropriate to the organization. Improve communication among all stakeholders. Create a total organization perspective that goes beyond silo thinking. Improve overall management of projects over time. Week 1: Modern Project Management

18 Project Life Cycle FIGURE 1.1 Week 1: Modern Project Management

19 : Iterative & Overlapping
Executing Process Y T Planning Process I V I T C A Initiating Process Closing Process F O L Controlling Process E V E L It is important to note that these 5 major PM processes are iterative and over-lapping throughout the project life cycle. They are not one-at-a-time, step-by-step processes. For example, Project Planning is not a one-time process. Planning is an iterative process that becomes more detailed and refined as the project progresses. In addition, these processes may overlap throughout the project life cycle, as illustrated above. Depending on the nature of the project, it may be necessary to repeat these processes over periods of time and at varying levels of effort throughout the project. In fact, these processes are usually reiterated within each phase of the project life cycle. Reference: Integrated Management Associates’ Seminar “A Practical Approach to Planning & Controlling Projects” at PROJECT PROJECT S T A R T T I M E F I N I S H PHASES OF THE PROJECT LIFE CYCLE Proprietary - PMI Pittsburgh

20 Knowledge Areas and Life Cycle
FIGURE 1.1 Week 1: Modern Project Management

21 The Challenge of Project Management The Project Manager
Job descriptions vary, but most include responsibilities such as planning, scheduling, coordinating, and working with people to achieve project goals. Manages temporary, non-repetitive activities and frequently acts independently of the formal organization. Marshals resources for the project. Is linked directly to the customer interface. Provides direction, coordination, and integration to the project team. Is responsible for performance and success of the project. Must induce the right people at the right time to address the right issues and make the right decisions. Week 1: Modern Project Management

22 Fifteen Project Management Job Functions*
Define scope of project. Identify stakeholders, decision-makers, and escalation procedures. Develop detailed task list (work breakdown structures). Estimate time requirements. Develop initial project management flow chart. Identify required resources and budget. Evaluate project requirements. Identify and evaluate risks. Prepare contingency plan. Identify interdependencies. Identify and track critical milestones. Participate in project phase review. Secure needed resources. Manage the change control process. Report project status. Week 1: Modern Project Management

23 Suggested Skills for Project Managers
Project managers need a wide variety of skills. They should: Be comfortable with change. Understand the organizations they work in and with. Lead teams to accomplish project goals. Project managers need both “hard” and “soft” skills. Hard skills include product knowledge and knowing how to use various project management tools and techniques. Soft skills include being able to work with various types of people. Week 1: Modern Project Management

24 Suggested Skills for Project Managers
Communication skills: Listens, persuades. Organizational skills: Plans, sets goals, analyzes. Team-building skills: Shows empathy, motivates, promotes esprit de corps. Leadership skills: Sets examples, provides vision (big picture), delegates, positive, energetic. Coping skills: Flexible, creative, patient, persistent. Technology skills: Experience, project knowledge. Week 1: Modern Project Management

25 The Importance of Project Management
Factors leading to the increased use of project management: Compression of the product life cycle Knowledge explosion Triple bottom line (planet, people, profit) Corporate downsizing Increased customer focus Small projects represent big problems Week 1: Modern Project Management

26 More Advantages of Project Management*
Bosses, customers, and other stakeholders do not like surprises Good project management (PM) provides assurance and reduces risk PM provides the tools and environment to plan, monitor, track, and manage schedules, resources, costs, and quality PM provides a history or metrics base for future planning as well as good documentation Project members learn and grow by working in a cross-functional team environment *Knutson, Joan, PM Network, December 1997, p. 13 Week 1: Modern Project Management

27 Benefits of an Integrative Approach to Project Management
Integration (or centralization) of project management provides senior management with: An overview of all project management activities A big picture of how organizational resources are used A risk assessment of their portfolio of projects A rough metric of the firm’s improvement in managing projects relative to others in the industry Linkages of senior management with actual project execution management Week 1: Modern Project Management

28 Integrated Project Management Systems
Problems resulting from the use of piecemeal project management systems: Do not tie together the overall strategies of the firm. Fail to prioritize selection of projects by their importance of their contribution to the firm. Are not integrated throughout the project life cycle. Do not match project planning and controls with organizational culture to make appropriate adjustments in support of project endeavors. Week 1: Modern Project Management

29 Integrated Management of Projects
FIGURE 1.2 Week 1: Modern Project Management

30 Project Management Office (PMO)
A PMO is an organizational group responsible for coordinating the project management function throughout an organization. Possible goals include: Collect, organize, and integrate project data for the entire organization. Develop and maintain templates for project documents. Develop or coordinate training in various project management topics. Develop and provide a formal career path for project managers. Provide project management consulting services. Provide a structure to house project managers while they are acting in those roles or are between projects. Week 1: Modern Project Management

31 The Technical and Sociocultural Dimensions of the Project Management Process
FIGURE 1.3 Week 1: Modern Project Management

32 An Overview of Project Management 5e.
Week 1: Modern Project Management


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