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Project Management. Over view. What is ……. project management Project team, Delivery, deliverables Stages of Project, Project definition, project plan, Manage delivery, Identification and Risk management. What is a Project.
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Over view • What is ……. • project management • Project team, • Delivery, deliverables • Stages of Project, • Project definition, project plan, • Manage delivery, • Identification and Risk management
What is a Project • A one time job undertaken to create a unique product or service • Creates a unique product, service or result • Done for a purpose • Performed by a team of people provided for the project duration • Has interrelated activities • A successful project is one which achieves or exceeds the expectation of your stake holders
Projects versus Operations Projects • Performed by people • Constrained by limited resources • Planned, executed and controlled • Have specific life cycle • Unique • Eg: construction of house, residential complex, designing new software Operations • Performed by people • Constrained by limited resources • Planned, executed and controlled • Ongoing • Repetitive • Eg: Manufacturing of cars, medicines, producing multiple copies of software
Why Project Management? • To have Better control of financial, physical, and human resources • Accountability • Learn from mistakes of others! • Improved customer relations • More Managed Outcomes • Lower costs • Higher quality and increased reliability • Higher profit margins • Improved productivity • Better internal coordination • Higher worker morale
Why Projects Fail • Poor communications • Poor planning • Weak business case • Lack of management direction & involvement • Incomplete specifications • Mismanagement of expectations
Why Project Management? • Structured approach • Projects are completed and end results are achieved • Reaching the end point predictably—to a given cost – within planned time • Structure- control- sufficient attention to detail and continuously driving action
Triple Constraints Theory 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
Project manager • Clear understanding –why and what • Plan the project- to understand how long will it take and how much will it cost • Manage the project- to ensure that as the project progresses, it achieves the defined objectives within the allotted time and cost • Complete the project properly – to make sure everything produced by the project is of the quality expected and works as desired
Project’s customer • The person or company who wants it to be implemented • Customer can be – • Yourself • Your boss at work • A customer who buys products and services • Anyone you work for • Customer is important for providing resources-money/people and for making decisions
Project team • Depending on the size of project • You can be manager and member • for larger projects more HR required for completion of project • Managing people in project team • They work under you as well as line manager • Still you have to manage, motivate and direct • Make sure they are spending time for you and not for their routine work
Delivery and deliverables • Getting things done you set out to do • Delivery means completing the project to the expected time and cost with the desired outcome • Deliverables are what is delivered by a project • Deliverables are defined at the start of the project • Eg: Inspection report • Marriage • New house
Dimensions of a project • Scope • Quality • Time • Cost • Risk • All above dimensions interdependent – change any one – impact will be on other variables
Sample……. • Eg: decorating the rooms in your house: front and dining room: three coats of paint: cost of paint 5000/-; 4 days with normal brush: spray machine can work faster—may paint uncovered objects- apply above dimensions- • Scope—paint the rooms • Quality – three coatings – paint brand • Time- 4 days • Cost- 5000++ • Risk- low risk ( painting by brush) • High risk - sprayer
Exercise 1Define the 5 dimensions • Processing of 300000 Bill Mail service articles (weight 25 grams each) . All Pre-mailing activities to be done by You. Time 3 day. To be delivered within district. • May claim damages if not delivered within 3 days.
Stages of a project—life cycle • Defining the project • Planning • Managing and execution • Delivery-deliverables • Closing down
STEP 1 • DEFINE THE WHY AND WHAT
CREATING PROJECT DEFINITION • Ask the question- • Why do you need a project? • What will your project deliver? • Success in projects depends on understanding precisely , completely and unambiguously what you are trying to achieve
Scope of the project • Defining what is the outcome of the project • Objects can be tangible or intangible • Done by asking a series of structured questions • Why do you want to do this project? • What will you have at the end of the project that you don’t have now? • Will you deliver anything else?
Is anything explicitly excluded from the project? • Are there any gaps or overlaps with other projects- or changes to the boundaries of the project? • What assumptions you are making? • Are there any significant problems you are aware of that you must overcome? • Has the customer or situation , set any specific conditions on the way you do this project?
Exercise 2 • Each team will be assigned with a project • Discuss the project with your team members • Ask for the information if any required. • Get the clear picture of the project. • Fill in the project definition template . • Present after 15 minutes. END OF THE UNIT
STEP 2 CREATE YOUR PROJECT PLAN
Project plan • Brainstorm a task list • Convert the task list to a skeleton plan • Estimate times –add dependencies-and delays • Who will do what • Build the plan into a schedule • Work out costs • Add in milestones and contingency • Review and amend- can you, should you? • Review plan with project customer.
Brainstorm a task list • Involve team members- experts-not more than five??? • Use flip charts- post-it note • Group the common tasks • Logically arrange in to tasks and sub tasks • Now ask: • Are these really all the tasks you need to meet your objective? • Can you allocate and manage? If not breakdown into smaller pieces until you don’t see as an activity
Brainstorm a task list • Is everything really necessary to meet the objective or are some extra? • Are all the tasks different or are any really the same? • Number the tasks in order • Arrange as per the hierarchy of tasks –leading to a WBS • Task –1 • Subtask- 1.1 • Sub-sub task-1.1.1
Task list • Eg: Setting up a computer lab • Tasks • Select contractor • Write tender • Document need • Prepare office • Install furniture • Install PC • Design office layout • Send tender to possible suppliers • Review responses
Task list - continued • Select contractor • Fit carpets • Flooring • New lights • New sockets • Fit electrics • Choose new furniture • Order furniture • Remove old furniture • Fit new furniture
Task list - continued • Choose new PC • Select software • Order PC and software • Install software on PC • Install configured PC
Exercise 3 • Write down the task list for the project allotted to you. • You have 45 minutes. • At the completion present it to the class. • Trainer to summarize
Work Breakdown Structure ( WBS) • Converting task into plan –WBS • Provides skeleton to your plan • Arrange tasks as per groups • Rename tasks to have clarity • Add new tasks if required • Give a number taking into account hierarchy of tasks • Identify subtasks if any and number accordingly
Check and review the Project definition • Are these really all the tasks you need to meet your objective? • Is there anything left out? • Whether above WBS can be managed? • Is every thing necessary? • Can you see addition of new tasks –1.3,2.4, Prepare the WBS for your project
Estimate times – dependencies and delays • Converting WBS to schedule of activities • Estimate the time of subtasks and add to get time required for a task • Natural delays (waiting for supply of furniture)
Exercise 5 Estimate time for your project
Project team • Allocate the tasks in the plan • Requirement of skills • Man power of each category required • Tasks with zero effort (waiting time) • Bottle necks • Compromises • Quality conditions
Exercise 6 Build your team
Build plan to a schedule • Start and end date for each task • Start and end date for overall project • End date = start date + effort • Start date depends on • Predecessor tasks and external dependencies • When people have completed previous work • Availability of team members • Exclude holidays • Leave of team members • Overlaps
Costing • Costs associated with running the project • Team members • Team manager • Buying deliverables— • Material • Consultation • Taxes • Contingencies • Miscellaneous
Milestones and contingencies • Select key events • Risk estimation • Top down estimate: project manager’s intuition or gut feeling • Bottom –up estimate: looking at every individual task in the plan and identifying how much risk in each task. More accurate but time consuming Exercise 8 What are the mile stones and risks and contingencies in my project
To improve on time line • Can you remove any of the tasks? (2.2.1) • Are estimates reasonable or can they be reduced? • Can you remove any dependency? (4.6>3.5) • Can you overlap any tasks? (4.6---3.5) • Can you use any of the resources more efficiently? Keep everyone busy by moving tasks around. • Can you add in more resource? • Finally draw the project plan