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An A-Z Guide to Planning, Managing, and Executing an SAP BW Project Part 1. Dr. Bjarne Berg Comerit Inc. What We’ll Cover (part 1)…. Writing the BW business case Defining the scope Writing the milestone plan Timelines and staffing plan Budgeting On-boarding and training
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An A-Z Guide to Planning, Managing, and Executing an SAP BW ProjectPart 1 Dr. Bjarne Berg Comerit Inc.
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
What We’ll Cover (in part 2)… • The blueprinting phase • Leveraging the standard content • Modeling for your solution • Deliverables • The realization phase • Best practices for managing the implementation of ODS and InfoCubes • Managing the environments and transports • Managing unit, system, integration & stress testing of BW • The implementation phase • Executing the cut-over to production • Conducting end-user and power user training • Establishing the end-user support organization • Post-implementation review and next steps
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Writing the Business Case The business case must be aligned with some concrete business benefits. The best way to write a business case is to align it with one of these areas: Money Strategy Reducing time and effort of delivery Improved information quality and access for end users
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Defining the Scope • First determine what the business drivers were and make sure you meet these objectives. • Define the scope in terms of what is included, as well as what is not included. • Make sure you obtain approval of the scope before you progress any further. All your work from now on will be driven based on what is agreed to at this stage. • As part of the written scope agreement, make sure you implement a formal change request process. This typically includes a benefit-cost estimate for each change request and a formal approval process. Change management is done to manage scope, timelines and competing business requirements.
Defining the Scope (cont.) • For the first go-live, keep the scope as small as possible, i.e. Accounts Payable, Accounts Receivable, G/L or COPA • You have only 3 dimensions to work with: Scope Resources (people, technology and money) Time If one of these dimensions changes, you have to adjust at least one of the others
Prioritizing the Scope (Example) Plan multiple implementations and write a long-term outline that may change (using a formal change request process).
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Writing the Milestone Plan Use milestone plan to illustrate dependencies and high-level tasks: Post this plan on the walls in the hallways, don't hide it in the PM's office!!! Keep it under 30 items!!
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Timelines and Staffing Plan: Lessons Learned… • Developer training should start early for all project team members • SAP R/3 skills are not easily transferable to BW; hands-on experience is needed (it is very hard to learn while being productive) • The quality of the team members is much more important than the number of members. A skilled BW developer can accomplish in one day what 3 novice developers can do in a week (the tool has a steep learning curve). • Project time and cost estimates should be based on team’s experience level • Plan on formal knowledge-transfer from external resources from day one. Link inexperienced members with experienced ones • Have identified “go-to” resources available in all areas (make a list) (we will take a second look at this when we do the budgeting!)
Example: Small BW Project for Single Subject Area (e.g. Billing, Inventory or Accounts Payable). These are roles, not positions. (Sometimes one team member can fill more than one role.) Basis and functional R/3 support 4-5 team members and normally 3-6 months duration depending on scope
Basis and functional R/3 support Example: Mid-sized BW Project for Single Complex Subject Area(e.g. Cost and Profitability, Internal Billing). These are roles, not positions. (Sometimes one team member can fill more than one role.) 8-10 team members and normally 2-4 months duration depending on scope
Project sponsor/ Steering Committee Project Manager BW Architect Portal developer(s) Sales Team Finance Team Material Mgmt. Team Business analyst/(sub-team lead) Business analyst/(sub-team lead) Business analyst/(sub-team lead) BW developer BW developer BW developer Presentation developer(s) Presentation developer(s) Presentation developer(s) Basis and functional R/3 support ETL developer ETL developer ETL developer Example: Large BW Project for Multiple Subject Areas(e.g. Sales, Finance and Material Management) These are roles, not positions. (Sometimes one team member can fill more than one role.) 15-25 team members and normally 6-18 months duration depending on scope
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Budgeting Process Steps Size the BW effort based on the scope Prioritize the effort Map the effort to the delivery schedule Plan for number of resources needed based on the scope, delivery schedule and the effort. We will now look at an example how this process works in the real world Create the milestone plan and the scope statement first, before attacking the budgeting process!! Start the budgeting process by estimating the workload in terms of the development effort.
1. Size the BW Effort Based on the Scope (Real Example) Remember that your sizing also has to be based on the team’s experience and skill level.
2. Prioritize the Effort The next step is to prioritize and outline the effort on a strategic timeline Make sure your sponsor and the business community agree with your delivery schedule
3. Use Project Estimates & the Timeline to Create Project Load Plan There are 480 available work hours per project member per quarter. Knowing this, we can plan the number of team members we need……
4. Result: Good Input for the Staffing Costs and Planning… Use this information to plan for training, on-boarding and staffing This spike in resource needs is due to an overlap in the delivery schedule Now might be a good time to review that decision… Many companies plan a 60%- 40% mix of internal and external resources for a first go-live. Also, most use $50-$90 per hr for internal budgeting and $90-$170 per hr for external resources.
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
On-Boarding and Training Don’t underestimate the value of in-house, hands-on training in addition to formal SAP training classes.
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Writing the Workplan 400 to 1000 line-item workplans are not unusual for mid-size and large BW implementations The Workplan • Write a detailed workplan that references the methodology. • Make sure the workplan is detailed enough to be able to track project progress. • Progress can be measured by hours used, vs. % of tasks completed.
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Monitoring Progress • Manage the workplan from a percent complete standpoint on a weekly basis • Create weekly status reports with core progress metrics and send to all team members (keep it high-level and tangible) • Require monthly status reports from all team members in a fixed format • Keep a close eye on the deadlines for the deliverables and make to follow-up personally on late tasks BW is a complex environment that has many dependencies. Late tasks can have significant impacts on the overall project.
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
Monitoring BW Quality and Formal Approval Process: Example Integration Testing Create Technical specs Create Functional specs No System Testing Complete? No Yes Unit Testing Complete? Yes Configuration Peer Review Yes Peer Review Approved? No Yes Approved? No Structured walkthrough Complete? Yes Structured walkthrough No Complete? No Yes
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
The User Acceptance Group and Its Role • Create a user acceptance team with a total of 5-7 members from the various business departments or organizations. • Keep the number odd to assist with votes when decisions are made. With fewer than 5 members it can be hard to get enough members present during a certain meeting time • Make them the focus of the requirements gathering in the early phase and later let this team become the user acceptance team (testing) in the realization phase • Meet with the team at least once a month during realization to refine requirements as you are building and have something to show the team This approach is hard to execute when also managing scope, but is essential to make sure the system meets the requirements
What We’ll Cover (part 1)… • Writing the BW business case • Defining the scope • Writing the milestone plan • Timelines and staffing plan • Budgeting • On-boarding and training • Writing the workplan • Monitoring progress • Monitoring BW quality and a formal approval process • The BW user acceptance group and its role • Wrap-up
7 Key Points to Take Home • Write the business case around the areas of greatest benefit to your users. Do not use a “shot-gun” approach but keep it focused. • Define your scope in-terms of what is included and state what is not included. • Establish a formal change control process that is well communicated. • Plan your project based on the hours required for the effort and the project team’s skill level. • Establish milestone dates and map the work hours required to these dates. • Establish a resource on-boarding plan. • Establish a formal process for quality control and approval of deliverables
Resources • Five Core Metrics: The Intelligence Behind Successful Software Management – by Lawrence H. Putnam & Ware Myers • Waltzing With Bears: Managing Risk on Software Projects - by Tom Demarco & Timothy Lister • Mastering the SAP Business Information Warehouse by - Kevin McDonald, Andreas Wilmsmeier, David C. Dixon
END OF PART 1. Next: How do we Deliver What we Promised? Questions? How to contact me: bberg@comeritinc.com