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Project Solutions, Inc. 2002. 2. . Project Management Viewed From Various Levels . Is our project portfolio aligned with the business needs? . Is there an opportunity to finish early? Does the business unit know this? . Can we take on this project?How long will it take?What will it cost?. What i
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1. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 1
2. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 2
3. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 3 Agenda Measuring Key Competencies of Successful Project Managers
Measuring Your Culture’s Project Management Success
Using the Project Management Office (PMO) to Enhance Successful Project Delivery
4. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 4 Measuring Key Competencies for Successful Project Managers Benefits???
To ensure that the most skilled project managers are assigned to the most critical projects.
To determine training needs by identifying gaps between job requirements and incumbent skill levels.
To evaluate current project managers and screen prospective project managers.
5. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 5 Key Competencies for Measuring Successful Project Managers Leadership
Motivating and inspiring people to keep the project moving toward successful completion.
Customer Relations
Managing the interactions between the customer and the rest of the project team resulting in both parties being enthusiastic about the relationship.
Project Planning
Developing and maintaining a workable scheme to accomplish the need that the project was approved to address.
Performance Measurement
Collecting and analyzing project information to determine where the project stands and predict future status and progress.
6. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 6 Key Competencies for Measuring Successful Project Managers (continued) Communicating
Exchanging information in various dimensions where the sender must make the information clear and unambiguous and the receiver must make sure the information is complete and understood.
Organization Effectiveness
The ability to "get things done." Having an understanding of the formal and informal structures of all the organizations involved.
Team Building
Encouraging and enabling people to work together as a team to accomplish the project goals.
Staff Development
Encouraging personal and professional growth among the members of the project team.
7. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 7 Key Competencies for Measuring Successful Project Managers (continued) Perspective
The ability to take a broader organizational view and understand how the project relates to a hierarchy of larger undertakings.
Negotiating
Work with others in order to reach an agreement where all parties are satisfied with the agreement.
Risk Management
Identifying, analyzing, and responding to risks over the life of the project.
Minimizing the consequences of adverse events and maximizing the results of positive events.
8. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 8 Key Competencies for Measuring Successful Project Managers (continued) Problem Solving
Is a combination of identifying the problem and determining/implementing a solution (technical, managerial, or interpersonal).
Decision Making
Making the best choice from many alternatives (whether received/made from the customer, team, or another managers)
Making the best choice based on the timing of the event (the "best" alternative may not be the "right" decision if it is made too early or too late).
9. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 9 Measuring Your Culture’s Project Management Success
Management of the overall project(s) portfolio
Management of Individual Projects
Management of the Organizational Environment
10. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 10 Measuring Your Culture’s Project Management Success (continued) Management of the Project Portfolio
Defining Project Portfolio Management…
A process to collect and measure the delivery progress of all programs/projects within the organization or business unit.
Usually managed through the PMO
Includes all significant project initiatives - Large, Medium or Small that have been identified as mission critical.
Governance board or executive leadership prioritizes and ranks work within portfolio to fit company strategic direction.
11. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 11 Management of the Project Portfolio (continued) Operational Integration
Development of a portfolio annual budget
Development of a strategic plan supporting the portfolio objectives.
Content of the portfolio is documented and appropriately distributed.
Portfolio Development
Project selection criteria supports the strategic plan.
Project selection criteria is objective, and consistently applied.
Portfolio Maintenance
Ensuring priorities are consistent across the organization.
Facilitating a portfolio change management process as needed.
All changes to the portfolio are communicated broadly.
Properly cancelled projects are viewed as successful projects.
12. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 12 Management of Individual Projects Consistent, repeatable processes
PM approach for identifying and managing the work
Management approach is flexible to support different types of projects.
Available, timely access to project information
Project-related
Corporate - salaries, rates, overtime policies, etc.
Knowledgeable and skilled team members
Project management skills
General management skills
Application area skills
Project stakeholder commitment
Project sponsor provides financial support and removes barriers as called
Project manager and project team are committed to project success
The project's customer displays a visible commitment to the project
13. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 13 Management of the Organizational Environment Consistency of Project Management Terms
Project management terms are defined, documented, communicated, and used consistently throughout the organization.
Visible Management Commitment
Believes in strong sponsorship for project success.
Insists on development of a detailed, viable project plan.
Makes it safe for the team to admit that a project is in trouble.
Rewards prudent business decisions
Supports continuous improvement, and lessons learned.
Project and functional managers are partners.
Corporate priorities are reflected in day-to-day decisions.
14. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 14 Management of the Organizational Environment (continued) Human Resource Practices
A criteria for project manager selection and promotion
A recognition and reward systems
Career opportunities
For project management experts and functional experts.
A project management governance model in place
Roles are well-defined, understood, and accepted
Corporate Systems
Accounting, budgeting, performance evaluation, time reporting, etc. are available to accommodate project needs
15. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 15 The Project Management Office (PMO) to Enhance Successful Project Delivery A full-service solution provider for all of the organization’s project management needs
Center of Competency for Project Management excellence.
A consistent systematic approach for managing projects effectively.
First to learn of delivery opportunities and threats from project status reporting as it affects the overall organization project portfolio.
The “Best Friend” for the Project Manager.
16. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 16 Key Functions of the PMO Project Portfolio Management Support
Prioritization and operations planning/forecasting
Project Information Integrity
Project Management Training and Mentoring
Resource Management – Gaps, Recruiting, & Skills Competency
Leadership - Key Projects
Project Management Processes & Methodology
PM Metrics/Reporting
17. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 17 A Typical PMO Model
18. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 18 PMO Staffing Model/Example Key Roles
PMO VP/Director/Manager
PM Mentor/Consultants
PM Assistant
PA Assistant
Other Roles
HR/Project Resource Analyst
Vendor/Contract Analyst
Quality Assurance
19. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 19 Continuous Cycle of Direction, Validation and Adjustments To Accelerate Delivery
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21. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 21 The Benefits of the PMO for the Organization Providing the Management Team with current project information to measure to strategic initiatives.
Identifying “Bottlenecks” for immediate corrective action.
Identifying excess project capital budget that can be re-applied to other critical projects.
Enhancing confidence and skill level of among fellow project managers throughout the organization!!! The Project Manager’s Best Friend!!!!!!
Increasing customer confidence that we are serious on managing projects effectively.
22. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 22 PMO Adding Value! - Example Assume your Project Portfolio is currently at 100 projects in development and 20 awaiting startup.
Assume your average Project Budget is $500K and the average duration is projected at 200 work days. Thus the Portfolio has a $50M tactical value.
If the PMO could save you 10% (average) on budget and time per project, per fiscal year, how important would this be for you?
10% improvement would mean your Project Portfolio would save $5M over time and allow for 10 additional projects to be started earlier than was expected provided resources are available…in the same fiscal year.
23. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 23 What to Consider When Establishing a PMO You should answer the following questions if you are serious about establishing a PMO…
What value would a PMO be to our organization?
What will it cost to establish and run the PMO?
What extent will the PMO’s focus on establishing standards have on creativity & flexibility of project staff in the working field? Will it create risks to existing customer relationships?
How will we ensure the PMO serves the appropriate functions for the organization?
How will the PMO be staffed?
Where will the organization be situated both organizationally and physically (centralized vs. decentralized)?
24. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 24 As Project Managers, What Have We Learned? Project Management value is about meeting or exceeding delivery expectations – for every project.
The appropriate project management skills
The appropriate environment for projects to succeed
Always keep a constant drive with your project team to identify project delivery acceleration opportunities and/or delivery threats.
When in doubt, contact your PMO!!
The Human Factor is so vital to project success! People are the only “tool solution” for delivering projects!
If we treat every person as our customer to exceed project expectations, our value will always continue to grow in the eyes of our customers!!
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26. Project Solutions, Inc. 2002 26 Thank You For Your Time!