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Revenue -Based Project Management. Course Objectives. Six Step Methodology – Standard Common Sense Common language / Common culture Key questions and answers Balance Demands and Resources Time, Budget, Cost, Quality, … Learning by doing, by mistakes, … Looser, thinker, maker.
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Course Objectives • Six Step Methodology – Standard Common Sense • Common language / Common culture • Key questions and answers • Balance Demands and Resources • Time, Budget, Cost, Quality, … • Learning by doing, by mistakes, … • Looser, thinker, maker
Team Formation / Introduction • Team development • performing, norming, storming, forming • Introduction • Name • Job (to study) • Issues / Problems by doing the Job • Business / Personal Objectives and Goals
Team Introduction • Self introduction to the Team members • Project Team Name • Project Team Logo • Project Team Budget / Cost / Quality way • Vision and Mission Statement • Project Leader / Spokesperson
Project Leadership / Management • List 6 characteristics of a high performing project team • List 6 characteristics of a low performing project team • List 6 characteristics of the best project leader • List 6 characteristics of the worst project leader
Project Leadership / Management • List 6 characteristics of Customers the project leader should anticipate • List 6 actions the project leader should take before assembling a team • List 6 ongoing duties of the project leader • List 6 characteristics of an effective project leader
Project Leadership / Management • Characteristics of effective Project Leaders • Ensure goals are understood • Manages meetings • Provides a common focus and language • Create structure in ambiguous situations • Gives performance feedback • Coaches and encourages growth • Instills trust • Lives the example
Create synergy through • Rational and functional problem solving • Define the Problem • Determine the Root Cause • Identify Solutions (at least 3) • Select the best solution (not the first) • Implement / Realize • Follow up / Controlling
Create synergy through • Human resource management and leadership • Open communications • Open and constructive voicing • Clear goals and objectives • Performance feedback • Recognition for contribution (different forms) • Encouragement for growth / thinking out of the box
Create synergy through • Leading and managing through your heart and head • Aligning project needs and individuals goals • Applying facts not just emotions • Demonstrate you care abut the work and the people • Demonstrate leadership through openness • Demonstrate leadership through roughness • Demonstrate leadership through kindness • Demonstrate leadership through loving
Creating a common language • ActivityA basic measurable unit of work in a project that has an expected duration, resource, cost and quality requirement. • TaskAn action step or subset of an activity • DurationElapsed time required to complete an task and/or activity • Labor hoursThe amount of human effort required to perform an activity. • SuccessorAn activity that is dependent on receiving inputs from a previous linked activity known as the predecessor • PredecessorAn activity that mustbe completed before another activity can start or finish.
Creating a common language • Critical ActivityAn activity with no slack • Critical PathA series of dependent activities with no slack. • Milestone End date of a key activity or agreed upon review date. • Network DiagramProject logic chart, showing dependency relationships. • Early/late StartEarliest/latest possible start date. • Early/late FinishEarliest/latest possible end date. • Planned start/finishDate plan calls for activity to start or finish.
Creating a common language • Actual start/finishDate activity actually started or finished. • Slack / float Amount activity can slip without changing latest end date. • Lag Time between the end of one activity and beginning of another. • Timeline chartA calendarized bar chart showing each activity and its start/finish dates. • Work Breakdown StructureAn easy-to-read chart that shows the decomposition of a big project into its component parts and then into activities. • Statement of WorkA brief description of an activity that defines its outcome and should include the estimated cost and time to perform the given activity.
Project Management Triangel Time how long? Project- Planning Quality how well? Cost how munch?
Six Step Project Methodology • Analyze (SWOT) • Organize (Planning) • Resource (Organization) • Implement (Realize) • Follow up (Control) • Close out (Finish)
Six Step Project Methodology - Analyze • Customer • Business / Service Reasons • End product or service • Key deliverables / Key answers • Close out Date • Budget / Cost / Revenue • SWOT
Six Step Project Methodology - Analyze • Who are we doing this for? • Why we are doing this? • What must we deliver? • Is there additional information available? • When is it due? How firm is this date? • What are the capital resource requirements? • What authority do I have? Want? • What is the anticipated ROI? • What is the anticipated amortization time?
Six Step Project Methodology - Organize • Planning • Strategies • Basis plan • Network Plan / Diagram (NP) • Time schedule • Timeline chart / Gantt chart
Six Step Project Methodology – Organize • Determining what has to be done to get to the goal / objectives. • Work out breakdown structure. • List all the activities and tasks required to complete the project • Brainstorming • Determine order to perform activities and tasks – critical path – determine dependencies • Create a Network Plan / Diagram (Net) • Estimate duration / budget / cost / time
Six Step Project Methodology – Organize • Timing / Scheduling • Activity / task deliverables • The start and end date • The task duration • Key dates within the activity / task • Milestones • List the actions / steps / work to complete the activity or task
Six Step Project Methodology – Organize • Timeline Chart / Gantt Chart / Milestone Chart • List by path • Start with critical path • Followed by any non critical path, show early and late starts and ends • List a activity or task only once (When activity or task is only one time necessary?) • Show skills / know how by activity or task • Identify by name or team responsible person by activity or task
Six Step Project Methodology - Resource • Organization / people / human capital • Equipment • Location • Materials • Infrastructure • etc.
Six Step Project Methodology – Resources • Staffing / human capital • Which tasks will I do? (Organize) • What other skills are needed to support this project? • How will I involve others to ensure buy in and support? • What information will I need from them? • What information will they need from me? • What kind of help / tools / … need they? • How will the team improve with the duration of the project?
Six Step Project Methodology – Resources • Responsibility Matrix
Six Step Project Methodology – Resources • Equipment and Materials • What equipment and materials will be requiered? • What are the lead / delivery times associated with theses requirements? • Does the lead / delivery time impact the time planning / scheduling? • Who is the best supplier? • Can activity or task be out sourced? Time?
Six Step Project Methodology - Implement • Realize strategies • Performance measurements • Human capital / Resources • Material / Equipment Resources • Threat / Risk management • Communications • One way / Dialogue
Six Step Project Methodology – Implement • Performance management questions • What obstacles are likely to occur? • Where do they occur? • How can obstacles be eliminated, avoided or managed? • How will be Quality measured? • Who and how will activity and task completion be reported? • How will be activity / task / project progress monitored?
Six Step Project Methodology – Implement • Communication / Dialogue • Who needs to be kept informed? • How often? • By what means? • All of the information? • How often should the team meet / come together? • Electronical meetings? • Who develops the agenda?
Six Step Project Methodology – Follow up • Controlling • Begins at the first step • Quality measurements • Cost measurements • Motivation (Motive in action) • etc.
Six Step Project Methodology – Follow up • Management status report • Current projected end date • % project complete • % budget spent • Overtime hours to date • Activity / Tasks completed • Focus for nect activity / tasks / period
Six Step Project Methodology – Close out • Finishing • Close out first when work is complete done • Delivery of end product(s) or service(s) • Recognition of contributions • motivate • Documentation close out • Lesson learned / Turnover
Influence • The ability to impact the action or behavior of others ask yourself following questions: • What do you know about them? • What do they know about you? • What do they know about your problems / issues? • Ask yourself, who can say yes, how says no?
Influence • Letting others have your way approach them: • Present from their point of view • Ask for what you want • Be numerical and specific • Be direct and clear in your statements • Do not play games with them • Best timing from the project / their point of view • As early as possible
Influence • Behaviors that impact others and your self in a positive or negative way: • Assertiveness • Reasoning • Information sharing • Collaborating • Bargaining • Friendliness • What worked? • What didn’t work?
Organizational terms and definitions • CustomerThe one who needs the work done and often pays the bills for your project. They can be from the inside and/or outside of your firm typically from the outside. • Stakeholder Other parties who will be affected by the duration, budget, cost, impact, quality and time of your project. The stakeholders could be the sponsor, customer, organization team, team member, … • Sponsor The one that funds the project from the inside. • Functional managerIndividuals who own and control the team members assigned to your project and to others. • Project manager / leader Individual responsible for the project. • Matrix organizationAn organizational structure in which the project manager / leader is responsible for the project and has the budget rights and the functional manager own the human resource that will have to be assigned to the project. Project members usually report simultaneously to the project and functional manager.
Organizational terms and definitions • Project teamA group of individuals assigned working for a project reporting one project leader. • Sub-Contractor Individuals or a business that will do certain activities on your project for you or will assign contract employees to work temporarily for the team. • Vendor Usually a separate firm that provides equipment, materials or supplies which your firm or the project needs. • ResourcesAssets that the project needs: People (human resource), Equipment, Materials, Budget, Supplies, …