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Project Termination

Project Termination. Date: 01/12/2010 Dr. Ayham Jaaron. Introduction. All projects end The objectives have been completed It no longer makes sense to finish Some teams move on to other projects Other times, members goes their own way The client may be happy, mad, or anywhere in between.

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Project Termination

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  1. Project Termination Date: 01/12/2010 Dr. Ayham Jaaron

  2. Introduction • All projects end • The objectives have been completed • It no longer makes sense to finish • Some teams move on to other projects • Other times, members goes their own way • The client may be happy, mad, or anywhere in between

  3. The Variables of Project Termination • Termination by extinction • Termination by addition • Termination by integration • Termination by starvation

  4. Termination by Extinction • Extinction occurs in any scenario where the project goes away • Successful • Achieved its goals • Or stopped because it is unsuccessful Examples: • The product has been developed and handed over to the client. • The building has been completed and accepted by the owner.

  5. Termination by Extinction...con’t • Famous example: The explosion of NASA’s Challenger has stopped many projects overnight.

  6. Termination by Addition • Applies to an in-house project that carried out in the parent organization. • When the project is successful, it is institutionalized (by making or adding it as a part of the parent organization) • While the project goes away, project personnel and assets are transferred to the organization through changes in structure.

  7. Termination by Integration • The most common way to terminate a project and most complex. • The project comes into the business • It is absorbed into the existing structure by integrating it in an already established system or division. • That structure also absorbs the assets of the project.

  8. Termination by Starvation • Termination by starvation involves greatly reducing the budget of a successful project to the extent where the project can not continue. • If the project is consistent with organizational goals, and has achieved its goals fully, then it can be terminated this way.

  9. When to Terminate a Project • Projects take on a life of their own • It may be easy to terminate a project that is finished • But it can be very difficult to terminate a project prior to its completion

  10. The Termination Process • Must first decide to terminate • Next, must carry out the decision to terminate

  11. The Decision Process • Sunk costs are not relevant to the decision about terminating a project • The main issue is if the cost to finish is more/less than the value of the project when finished

  12. The Implementation Process • Termination can be orderly or a “hatchet job” • Planning for an implementing an orderly shut down yields better results • Who leads the shut down project • A special termination manager may be used

  13. Things to Do • Insure tasks are completed • Notify the client • Finish the paperwork • Send out final invoices to the client • Redistribute resources • Clear with legal issues • Determine what records to keep • Assign support • Close the project books

  14. The Final Report—A Project History • Project performance • Administrative performance • Organizational structure • Project and administrative teams • Techniques of project management

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