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Project Management
“Body of Knowledge”
Guide
Chap 1-3
The PMBOK guide
5th Ed., 2013
Brian Davis, PhD
3/22/19 1
Summary
• Managing a project includes:
• ID requirements
• Address stakeholder needs, concerns and expectations
form project planning to finish
• Setting and maintaining stakeholder communications
• Balance competing constraints among:
– Scope
– Quality
– Schedule
– Budget
– Resources
– Risks
(from Annex A1, p. 417)
3/22/19 2
Outline Chapter 1
• 1. Relationship among:
– Project management
– Portfolio management
– Program management
– Organizational (project) management
– Operational management
– Organizational strategy
3/22/19 3
Outline (cont) Chap 2
• 2. Organizational influences
– Cultures and styles
– Communications
– Structures
– Process
– Environment
– Stakeholders and governance
– Team
– Project lifecycle
3/22/19 4
Outline (cont) Chap 3
• 3. Project Management Processes
– Process interactions
– Process groups
– Initiating, planning and executing process group
– Monitoring and controlling process group
– Closing process group
– Project information
– Role of knowledge areas
3/22/19 5
Outline (cont) Chap 4
• 4. Project Integration Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Develop project charter
– Develop project management plan
– Direct and manage project work
– Monitor and control project work
– Perform integrated change control
– Close project or phase
3/22/19 6
Outline (cont) Chap 5
• 5. Project Scope Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan scope management
– Collect requirements
– Define scope
– Create Work Breakdown Structures (WBS)
– Validate Scope
– Control Scope
3/22/19 7
Outline (cont) Chap 6
• 6. Project Time Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan schedule management
– Define activities
– Sequence activities
– Estimate activity resources
– Estimate activity durations
– Develop Schedule
– Control Schedule
3/22/19 8
Outline (cont) Chap 7
• 7. Project Cost Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan cost management
– Estimate costs
– Determine budget
– Control costs
3/22/19 9
Outline (cont) Chap 8
• 8. Project Quality Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan quality management
– Perform Assurance
– Control Quality
3/22/19 10
Outline (cont) Chap 9
• 9. Project Human Resource Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan human resource management
– Acquire project team
– Develop project team
– Manage project team
3/22/19 11
Outline (cont) Chap 10
• 10. Project Communications Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan communications management
– Manage communications
– Control communications
3/22/19 12
Outline (cont) Chap 11
• 11. Project Risk Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan risk management
– Identify risks
– Perform qualitative risk analysis
– Perform quantitative risk analysis
– Plan risk responses
– Control risks
3/22/19 13
Outline (cont) Chap 12
• 12. Project Procurement Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Plan procurement management
– Conduct procurements
– Control procurements
– Close procurements
3/22/19 14
Outline (cont) Chap 13
• 13. Project Stakeholder Management
• Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and
TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS
– Identify stakeholders
– Plan stakeholder management
– Manage stakeholder engagement
– Control stakeholder engagement
3/22/19 15
Chapter 1:
• PMBOK is a STANDARD, that establishes norms,
methods, processes and practices for a project
• The PMI Lexicon of Project Management Terms is the
vocabulary used
• Project management institute code of ethics and
professional conduct is meant to outline interactions
with stakeholders as
• Honest
• Responsible
• Comitted to fair practices
• Respectful
3/22/19 16
1.2 What is a Project, Portfolio,
Program?
• Temporary endeavor for product, service or result
• The Relationship of Portfolios, Programs and Projects
are roughly hierarchical, though projects can exist at all
levels. The Portfolio and Progrm construction are
based on organizational strategies.
• Portfolio
– Subportfolio
• Projects
• Programs
– projects
– Subprograms
» projects
3/22/19 17
1.3 What is Project Management
• “Project Management is the application of
knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to
project activities to meet project
requirements.” Application and integration of
47 processes categorized in 5 process groups:
– Initiation
– Planning
– Executing
– Monitoring and controlling
– Closing
3/22/19 18
Managing a Project includes:
• ID requirements
• Address stakeholder needs, concerns and expectations form project
planning to finish
• Setting and maintaining stakeholder communications
– Active, effective and collaborative
• Manage Stakeholders for
– Meeting project requirements
– Creating project deliverables
• Balance competing constraints among:
– Scope
– Quality
– Schedule
– Budget
– Resources
– Risks
• Iterative, progressively elaborated project plan throughout the project
lifecycle
3/22/19 19
1.4 Relationships among Portfolios,
Programs, Projects and Organizations
• Organizational Project Management:
– A strategy execution framework of organizational
management and practices to enable predictable
delivery on strategies and providing for better
performance and sustainable competitive
advantage.
• Portfolio, Program, Project Management:
– Aligned and/or driven by organizational strategies
– Contribute to the overall goals of the organization
3/22/19 20
1.5 Relationship between Project
Management and Operations Management
• Operations Management:
– Are typically day-to-day business operations
– Require business process management
• Operations and Project Management may
overlap in:
– When developing a new product
– Improvement to product development processes
• Project management MUST consider
Operations stakeyholders in projects.
3/22/19 21
1.5 Relationship between Project
Management and Organizational Strategy
• Projects are undertaken to achieve business
strategies
• Project management depends upon
organizational governance and processes
3/22/19 22
1.6 Business value
• Business value should be driven by projects,
either short, medium or long term
• Organization strategy is expressed via Mission
and Vision statements including market,
completion and environment
• Project management focuses on on the
successful delivery of products, services or
results (and drives business value).
3/22/19 23
1.7 Role of Project Manager
• Lead the team that is responsible for achieving
the project objectives
• Project manager is the link between the
organizational strategy and the project team
• Possesses the following competencies
– Knowledge
– Performance
– Personal: attitudes, personality, leadership
– Balance of technical, interpersonal and conceptual
skills to analyze situations and interact appropriately
3/22/19 24
1.7 Project manager characteristics
• Leadership
• Team building
• Motivation
• Communication
• Influencing
• Decision making
3/22/19 25
• Political and
cultural awareness
• Negotiation
• Trust building
• Conflict
management
• Coaching
Chapter 2: Organizational Influences
and Project Life Cycle
• Projects occur in a broader context
environment that the project itself
• Organizational influencers:
– Staffing practices
– Management practices
– Stakeholders
– Team structure and membership
– Activity phasing
– Relationships
3/22/19 26
Organizational Cultures and Styles
• The project manager needs to know who are the
decision makers and influencers and work with them to
increase the probability of project success.
• Common experiences within an organization:
– Shared visions, mission, values, beliefs, expectations
– Regulations, policies, methods, procedures
– Motivation and rewards systems
– Risk tolerance
– View of leadership, hierarchy, and authority relationships
– Code of conduct, work ethic, work hours
– Operating environments
3/22/19 27
2.1 Key Organizational Characteristics
• Organizational communications
• Organizational Structures
– Functional = little PM authority
– Matrix = strong PM authority
3/22/19 28
2.1.4 Organizational Process Assets
• Org. process assets can be grouped as:
– Processes and Procedures
• Eg., Plans, procedures, processes, policies, and
procedures
– Corporate knowledge base
• Eg., Lessons learned, historical info, completed
schedules, risk data, and earned value data.
3/22/19 29
2.1.4.1 Processes and Procedures
• Initiating and planning
– Guidelines and criteria
– Policies, product and project lifecycles, quality. Audits, improvements,
checklists, etc.
– Templates
• Executing, monitoring and controlling
– Change control procedures
– Financial control procedures
– Issue and defect management procedures
– Org communication requirements
– Procedures for work authorizations
– Risk control procedures
– Standardized guidelines, criteria, performance measurement
• Closing
– Project closure guidelines, (eg., lessons learned, product acceptance
criteria)
3/22/19 30
2.2.4.2 Corporate Knowledge Base
• Configuration management including versions
and baselines of standards, policies, procedures
and docs.
• Financial DBs, including labor hours, costs,
budgets, cost overruns
• Historical info and lessons learned
• Issue and defect management records
• Process measurement data (eg, process
improvement)
• Project files from previous projects
3/22/19 31
2.1.5 Enterprise Environmental
Factors
• Conditions not under control by the project team.
• Considered as “inputs”, but may have positive or
negative influence on project outcomes.
3/22/19 32
• Org. culture, structure and governance
• Geographic distribution of resources
• Government or industry standards
• Infrastructure
• Existing human resources (eg, skills)
• Personnel Admin (eg, staffing,
retention)
• Company work authorization systems
• Marketplace conditions
• Stakeholder risk tolerances
• Political climate
• Org. communication channels
• Commercial databases
• Project management information
system
2.2 Project Stakeholders and
Governance
• “Project governance-the alignment of the
project with stakeholders’ needs or objectives-
is critical to the successful management of
stakeholder engagement and the achievement
of organizational objectives.”
• Project stakeholders
– Project team members
– Internal stakeholders
– External stakeholders
3/22/19 33
Project Stakeholders
• May have various levels of engagement (eg, advisors to
developers)
• Stakeholder ID is a continuous process throughout the
entire project life cycle
• Stakeholders and positively and/or negatively impact
project objectives
• Stakeholder perception of a project may be positive or
negative.
• PM must manage stakeholder expectations
• Team members must interact with stakeholders in
professional and cooperative manner
3/22/19 34
Examples of Stakeholders
• Sponsor
• Customers and users
• Sellers (vendors, suppliers, contractors)
• Business partners (eg, data suppliers, trainers)
• (Internal) Organizational groups (eg, Sales, HR,
legal, finance, etc.)
• Functional managers
• Other Stakeholders (eg, financial entities,
government regulators, SMEs, consultants, etc.)
3/22/19 35
2.2.2 Project Governance
• An oversight function to enhance success and should be
described in the project management plan.
• Elements of project governance:
– Project success definition and deliverable acceptance criteria
– Process to ID, escalate and resolve issues
– Relationships among team and stakeholders
– Project org chart and project roles
– Communication processes
– Project decision-making processes
– Guidelines for alignment of project governance with
organizational strategies
– Project life cycle approach
– Process for stage gate or phase reviews
– Change review process
– Process to align internal stakeholders with project process reqs.
3/22/19 36
2.3 Project Team Roles
• Project management
• Project staff
• Supporting experts
• User or customer representatives
• Sellers (vendors, suppliers, contractors)
• Business partners (eg, data suppliers, trainers)
• Business partner members
3/22/19 37
2.3.1 Composition of Project Teams
• Dedicated:
– often seen in projectized organizations
– PMs have a great deal of authority
• Part-Time
– Common in functional organizations
• Joint ventures, consortiums, partnership
• Can be virtual, dispersed geographically
– Technology reliance for coordination and
communication
– Accommodations for different cultures, working
hours, time zones, local conditions and languages
3/22/19 38
2.4 Project Life Cycle
• Series of phases form initiation to closure
• Provides the basic framework for managing a
project
• Phases can be broken down by:
– Functional or partial objectives
– Intermediate results or deliverables
– Specific milestones
– Financial availability
– Generally time bounded
• Range from predictive (waterfall) to adaptive
(agile)
3/22/19 39
Cost, Staffing and Risk During Phases
• Low at start, peak as work is carried out, and
drop as project is closed out
• Risk and uncertainty is highest at beginning of
project, but should decrease over the course
of the project as decisions are reached and
deliverables are accepted
• Impact of changes on cost are lowest near the
start of the project and highest near the end.
• (“Fail Fast, Fail Early!”)
3/22/19 40
Fig 2-8. Cost and Staffing
3/22/19 41From PMBOK
Fig 2-9. Risk, Uncertainty and Cost
3/22/19 42From PMBOK
2.4.2.1 Phase Relationships
• Sequential
– Reduces uncertainty but may eliminate options for
reducing overall schedule
• Overlapping
– Con: may increase risk if phases start before all
info is in on last phase
– Pro: may allow for compression of time and allow
work in parallel.
3/22/19 43
Fig 2-8. Characteristics of the Project
Life Cycle
3/22/19 44From PMBOK
2.4.2.2 Predictive Life Cycles
3/22/19 45From PMBOK
2.4.2.2 Predictive Life Cycles
• Project Scope, Time and Cost are determined
early in project
• Series of sequential or overlapping steps
• Work in each phase is largely different in
nature form other steps
• Makeup and skills of team members vary from
phase to phase
3/22/19 46
2.4.2.3 Iterative and Incremental Life
Cycles
• Preferred for Projects that are complex, and/or objectives and
scope are likely to change.
• Project phases (iterations) repeat as the project team’s
understanding of project and product increases
• ITERATIONS develop the PRODUCT through repeated cycles
• INCREMENTS successively add FUNCTIONAITY to the product
through repeated cycles
• During an iteration:
– all the activities will be performed
– A set of deliverables is completed at the end of the iteration
• Future iterations may enhance deliverables or create new ones
• Each iteration builds deliverables until the exit criteria for project or
phase is met.
• Iterations allow project team to incorporate feedback form
stakeholders
3/22/19 47
Adaptive Life Cycles
• AKA as change-driven or agile methods
• Responsive to high levels of change and
stakeholder involvement
• Iterations are rapid (2-4 weeks)
• Set of requirements into backlog
• Beginning of iteration, high-priority items
developed during iteration, based on the time
within the iteration
• End of iteration, Product demo to stakeholder(s)
3/22/19 48
Adaptive Life Cycle
3/22/19 49
From https://bit.ly/2u5rNV8 , based on PMBOK
3. Project Management Processes
• Each process is characterized by
– Inputs
– Tools and techniques to be applied
– Outputs
– To be considered:
• Organizational process assets
• Enterprise environmental factors
3/22/19 50
To Ensure Project Success
• Select appropriate processes to objectives
• Define approach that can be adapted to meet
requirements
• Establish and maintain appropriate
communication and engagement with
stakeholders
• Comply with requirements to meet stakeholder
needs and expectations
• Balance competing constraints of scope,
schedule, budget, quality, resources, and risk
3/22/19 51
Product vs. Project Processes
• Project management processes
– Ensure the effective flow of the project throughout its
life cycle
– Application of tools and techniques described in
Chapters 4-13 (knowledge areas)
– Generally applicable to all project management
• Product-oriented processes
– Specify and create the Product
– Some processes may be product-specific
– Product processes need to be known to effectively
manage Project scope
3/22/19 52
Five (5) Process Management Groups
• PMBOK describes the nature of PM processes
and the integration among them, their
interactions and purposes.
– Initiating process group
– Planning process group
– Executing process group
– Monitoring and controlling process group
– Closing process group
3/22/19 53
Network of Process Groups
• Common PM process interactions
• PM process groups
• Initiation process group
• Planning process group
• Executing process group
• Monitoring and controlling process group
• Closing process group
• Project Information
• Role of knowledge areas
3/22/19 54
3.1 Common Project Management
Process Interactions
• PM Processes are well-defined but in practice
overlap and interact
• Iterative and many processes are repeated
during the project
• The integrative nature of PM requires the
monitoring and controlling process group to
interact with the other process groups (see Fig
3-1)
3/22/19 55
Fig 3-1. Monitoring and Controlling
Process Group Interaction With Other
Group Processes
3/22/19 56From PMBOK
Linkage Among Process Groups
• Process Groups are overlapping activities
• Output of one process can be input to another
process or a deliverable
• May be incremental deliverables
• Process group interaction is shown in Figure 3-
2.
3/22/19 57
Fig 3-2: Process Group Interaction
3/22/19 58From PMBOK
Project Management Process
Interactions
• Interactions can be
– among process groups or
– within process groups
• Fig 3-3 is a summary of simple flow and
interactions among process groups and
stakeholders
• PM processes are linked by INPUTS and OUTPUTS
• Output(s) from one process becomes the input(s)
to another process
• Iterative nature of project management results in
reuse of processes
3/22/19 59
Fig 3-3 PM Process Interactions
3/22/19 60
From PMBOK
Five (5) Process Management Groups
• PMBOK describes each process group in
sections 3.3-3.7
– 3.3 Initiating process group
– 3.4 Planning process group
– 3.5 Executing process group
– 3.6 Monitoring and controlling process group
– 3.7 Closing process group
3/22/19 61
3.3 Initiating Process Group
• The processes in this process group involve
authorization and start of project
• Key purpose is to align stakeholders with the project’s
purpose, and to involve them in the project going
forward
• Sets the vision for the project
• Initial Scope defined
• Initial finances committed
• Project charter approved
• Success criteria defined
• Large and complex projects typically involve phases (ie,
multiple Initiating processes for subsequent phases)
3/22/19 62
3.4 Planning Process Group
• Processes to:
– Define the total scope of the project
– Define and refine objectives
– Define actions to accomplish objectives
• Key purpose is to set strategy, tactics and
methods
• Define and Develop Project management plans
and other docs (deliverables).
– Allow for “progressive elaboration” = significant
changes in project can trigger changes in planning
processes
3/22/19 63
Project Management Plan
• The project management plan and associated
docs (deliverables) may include, but are not
limited to:
• Scope
• Time
• Cost
• Quality
• Communications
3/22/19 64
• Human
resources
• Risks
• Procurements
• Stakeholder
engagement
Updating
• Generally, learning through each phase will
suggest changes to the project (typically approved
in the monitoring and controlling processes)
• Updates to the project management plan and
other docs will provide greater visibility into
schedule, costs and other aspects of the project.
• The organization has procedures to dictate when
initial planning ends
• Results in each iteration are documented as
updates to the project management plan and
other docs
3/22/19 65
3.5 Executing Process Group
• Processes to complete the work defined in the project
management plan
– Coordinating people and resources
– Manage stakeholder expectations
– Performing and integrating activities
• Key purpose is to execute on strategy, tactics and
actions outlined in project management plan
• Most of budget expended in these processes
• Results from project execution may require planning
updates and and rebaselining
– Unanticipated risks
– Further analysis
3/22/19 66
3.6 Monitoring and Controlling Process
Group
• Processes to track, review and manage the
progress of project
– Monitor (measure) and analyze project performance
– ID variance with project management plan
– Recommending and Controlling changes in
anticipation of risks
– Influencing decision makers to ensure only approved
changes are implemented
• Key purpose is to continuously monitor health of
project and to trigger changes as new
information surfaces
3/22/19 67
3.7 Closing Process Group
• Processes to conclude all activities across all 5 project
management process groups for formal completion of
project, phase or contract
• Processes may include, but are not limited to:
– Obtain acceptance for closure by stakeholder(s)
– Conduct review
– Document lessons Learned
– Update organizational procedures
– Archive all docs
– Close procurement activities and other agreements
– Perform team assessments
– Release project resources
• Key purpose is to formally and visibly end project, phase or
contract
3/22/19 68
3.8 Project Information
• Distinction between DATA and INFORMATION
• Data throughout project is analyzed and used as
information in the project (esp. in the controlling
processes)
– Work performance data
• Raw observations collected during project
– Work performance information
• Analyzed data
– Work performance reports
• Analyzed data captured in formal project documents
3/22/19 69
3.9 Role of Knowledge Areas
• Ten (10) knowledge areas are used to classify
the 47 PMBOK project management processes
3/22/19 70
• Project initiation
management
• Project scope management
• Project time management
• Project cost management
• Project quality
management
• Project human resource
management
• Project communications
management
• Project risk management
• Project procurement
management
• Project stakeholder
management
Ten (10) Knowledge Areas and Five (5)
Process Group Relationship
• PMBOK shows how Knowedge areas integrate
with Process groups
• More information in subsequent cahpters (4-
13)
• Table 3-1 shows mapping of
– 47 project management processes within the
– 5 process groups and
– 10 knowledge areas
3/22/19 71
Table 3-1 PM Process Group Mapping
to Knowledge Areas
3/22/19 72

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Project Management Body of Knowledge. Chapters 1-3

  • 1. Project Management “Body of Knowledge” Guide Chap 1-3 The PMBOK guide 5th Ed., 2013 Brian Davis, PhD 3/22/19 1
  • 2. Summary • Managing a project includes: • ID requirements • Address stakeholder needs, concerns and expectations form project planning to finish • Setting and maintaining stakeholder communications • Balance competing constraints among: – Scope – Quality – Schedule – Budget – Resources – Risks (from Annex A1, p. 417) 3/22/19 2
  • 3. Outline Chapter 1 • 1. Relationship among: – Project management – Portfolio management – Program management – Organizational (project) management – Operational management – Organizational strategy 3/22/19 3
  • 4. Outline (cont) Chap 2 • 2. Organizational influences – Cultures and styles – Communications – Structures – Process – Environment – Stakeholders and governance – Team – Project lifecycle 3/22/19 4
  • 5. Outline (cont) Chap 3 • 3. Project Management Processes – Process interactions – Process groups – Initiating, planning and executing process group – Monitoring and controlling process group – Closing process group – Project information – Role of knowledge areas 3/22/19 5
  • 6. Outline (cont) Chap 4 • 4. Project Integration Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Develop project charter – Develop project management plan – Direct and manage project work – Monitor and control project work – Perform integrated change control – Close project or phase 3/22/19 6
  • 7. Outline (cont) Chap 5 • 5. Project Scope Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan scope management – Collect requirements – Define scope – Create Work Breakdown Structures (WBS) – Validate Scope – Control Scope 3/22/19 7
  • 8. Outline (cont) Chap 6 • 6. Project Time Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan schedule management – Define activities – Sequence activities – Estimate activity resources – Estimate activity durations – Develop Schedule – Control Schedule 3/22/19 8
  • 9. Outline (cont) Chap 7 • 7. Project Cost Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan cost management – Estimate costs – Determine budget – Control costs 3/22/19 9
  • 10. Outline (cont) Chap 8 • 8. Project Quality Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan quality management – Perform Assurance – Control Quality 3/22/19 10
  • 11. Outline (cont) Chap 9 • 9. Project Human Resource Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan human resource management – Acquire project team – Develop project team – Manage project team 3/22/19 11
  • 12. Outline (cont) Chap 10 • 10. Project Communications Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan communications management – Manage communications – Control communications 3/22/19 12
  • 13. Outline (cont) Chap 11 • 11. Project Risk Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan risk management – Identify risks – Perform qualitative risk analysis – Perform quantitative risk analysis – Plan risk responses – Control risks 3/22/19 13
  • 14. Outline (cont) Chap 12 • 12. Project Procurement Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Plan procurement management – Conduct procurements – Control procurements – Close procurements 3/22/19 14
  • 15. Outline (cont) Chap 13 • 13. Project Stakeholder Management • Each section has INPUTS, TOOLS and TECHNIQUES, and OUTPUTS – Identify stakeholders – Plan stakeholder management – Manage stakeholder engagement – Control stakeholder engagement 3/22/19 15
  • 16. Chapter 1: • PMBOK is a STANDARD, that establishes norms, methods, processes and practices for a project • The PMI Lexicon of Project Management Terms is the vocabulary used • Project management institute code of ethics and professional conduct is meant to outline interactions with stakeholders as • Honest • Responsible • Comitted to fair practices • Respectful 3/22/19 16
  • 17. 1.2 What is a Project, Portfolio, Program? • Temporary endeavor for product, service or result • The Relationship of Portfolios, Programs and Projects are roughly hierarchical, though projects can exist at all levels. The Portfolio and Progrm construction are based on organizational strategies. • Portfolio – Subportfolio • Projects • Programs – projects – Subprograms » projects 3/22/19 17
  • 18. 1.3 What is Project Management • “Project Management is the application of knowledge, skills, tools, and techniques to project activities to meet project requirements.” Application and integration of 47 processes categorized in 5 process groups: – Initiation – Planning – Executing – Monitoring and controlling – Closing 3/22/19 18
  • 19. Managing a Project includes: • ID requirements • Address stakeholder needs, concerns and expectations form project planning to finish • Setting and maintaining stakeholder communications – Active, effective and collaborative • Manage Stakeholders for – Meeting project requirements – Creating project deliverables • Balance competing constraints among: – Scope – Quality – Schedule – Budget – Resources – Risks • Iterative, progressively elaborated project plan throughout the project lifecycle 3/22/19 19
  • 20. 1.4 Relationships among Portfolios, Programs, Projects and Organizations • Organizational Project Management: – A strategy execution framework of organizational management and practices to enable predictable delivery on strategies and providing for better performance and sustainable competitive advantage. • Portfolio, Program, Project Management: – Aligned and/or driven by organizational strategies – Contribute to the overall goals of the organization 3/22/19 20
  • 21. 1.5 Relationship between Project Management and Operations Management • Operations Management: – Are typically day-to-day business operations – Require business process management • Operations and Project Management may overlap in: – When developing a new product – Improvement to product development processes • Project management MUST consider Operations stakeyholders in projects. 3/22/19 21
  • 22. 1.5 Relationship between Project Management and Organizational Strategy • Projects are undertaken to achieve business strategies • Project management depends upon organizational governance and processes 3/22/19 22
  • 23. 1.6 Business value • Business value should be driven by projects, either short, medium or long term • Organization strategy is expressed via Mission and Vision statements including market, completion and environment • Project management focuses on on the successful delivery of products, services or results (and drives business value). 3/22/19 23
  • 24. 1.7 Role of Project Manager • Lead the team that is responsible for achieving the project objectives • Project manager is the link between the organizational strategy and the project team • Possesses the following competencies – Knowledge – Performance – Personal: attitudes, personality, leadership – Balance of technical, interpersonal and conceptual skills to analyze situations and interact appropriately 3/22/19 24
  • 25. 1.7 Project manager characteristics • Leadership • Team building • Motivation • Communication • Influencing • Decision making 3/22/19 25 • Political and cultural awareness • Negotiation • Trust building • Conflict management • Coaching
  • 26. Chapter 2: Organizational Influences and Project Life Cycle • Projects occur in a broader context environment that the project itself • Organizational influencers: – Staffing practices – Management practices – Stakeholders – Team structure and membership – Activity phasing – Relationships 3/22/19 26
  • 27. Organizational Cultures and Styles • The project manager needs to know who are the decision makers and influencers and work with them to increase the probability of project success. • Common experiences within an organization: – Shared visions, mission, values, beliefs, expectations – Regulations, policies, methods, procedures – Motivation and rewards systems – Risk tolerance – View of leadership, hierarchy, and authority relationships – Code of conduct, work ethic, work hours – Operating environments 3/22/19 27
  • 28. 2.1 Key Organizational Characteristics • Organizational communications • Organizational Structures – Functional = little PM authority – Matrix = strong PM authority 3/22/19 28
  • 29. 2.1.4 Organizational Process Assets • Org. process assets can be grouped as: – Processes and Procedures • Eg., Plans, procedures, processes, policies, and procedures – Corporate knowledge base • Eg., Lessons learned, historical info, completed schedules, risk data, and earned value data. 3/22/19 29
  • 30. 2.1.4.1 Processes and Procedures • Initiating and planning – Guidelines and criteria – Policies, product and project lifecycles, quality. Audits, improvements, checklists, etc. – Templates • Executing, monitoring and controlling – Change control procedures – Financial control procedures – Issue and defect management procedures – Org communication requirements – Procedures for work authorizations – Risk control procedures – Standardized guidelines, criteria, performance measurement • Closing – Project closure guidelines, (eg., lessons learned, product acceptance criteria) 3/22/19 30
  • 31. 2.2.4.2 Corporate Knowledge Base • Configuration management including versions and baselines of standards, policies, procedures and docs. • Financial DBs, including labor hours, costs, budgets, cost overruns • Historical info and lessons learned • Issue and defect management records • Process measurement data (eg, process improvement) • Project files from previous projects 3/22/19 31
  • 32. 2.1.5 Enterprise Environmental Factors • Conditions not under control by the project team. • Considered as “inputs”, but may have positive or negative influence on project outcomes. 3/22/19 32 • Org. culture, structure and governance • Geographic distribution of resources • Government or industry standards • Infrastructure • Existing human resources (eg, skills) • Personnel Admin (eg, staffing, retention) • Company work authorization systems • Marketplace conditions • Stakeholder risk tolerances • Political climate • Org. communication channels • Commercial databases • Project management information system
  • 33. 2.2 Project Stakeholders and Governance • “Project governance-the alignment of the project with stakeholders’ needs or objectives- is critical to the successful management of stakeholder engagement and the achievement of organizational objectives.” • Project stakeholders – Project team members – Internal stakeholders – External stakeholders 3/22/19 33
  • 34. Project Stakeholders • May have various levels of engagement (eg, advisors to developers) • Stakeholder ID is a continuous process throughout the entire project life cycle • Stakeholders and positively and/or negatively impact project objectives • Stakeholder perception of a project may be positive or negative. • PM must manage stakeholder expectations • Team members must interact with stakeholders in professional and cooperative manner 3/22/19 34
  • 35. Examples of Stakeholders • Sponsor • Customers and users • Sellers (vendors, suppliers, contractors) • Business partners (eg, data suppliers, trainers) • (Internal) Organizational groups (eg, Sales, HR, legal, finance, etc.) • Functional managers • Other Stakeholders (eg, financial entities, government regulators, SMEs, consultants, etc.) 3/22/19 35
  • 36. 2.2.2 Project Governance • An oversight function to enhance success and should be described in the project management plan. • Elements of project governance: – Project success definition and deliverable acceptance criteria – Process to ID, escalate and resolve issues – Relationships among team and stakeholders – Project org chart and project roles – Communication processes – Project decision-making processes – Guidelines for alignment of project governance with organizational strategies – Project life cycle approach – Process for stage gate or phase reviews – Change review process – Process to align internal stakeholders with project process reqs. 3/22/19 36
  • 37. 2.3 Project Team Roles • Project management • Project staff • Supporting experts • User or customer representatives • Sellers (vendors, suppliers, contractors) • Business partners (eg, data suppliers, trainers) • Business partner members 3/22/19 37
  • 38. 2.3.1 Composition of Project Teams • Dedicated: – often seen in projectized organizations – PMs have a great deal of authority • Part-Time – Common in functional organizations • Joint ventures, consortiums, partnership • Can be virtual, dispersed geographically – Technology reliance for coordination and communication – Accommodations for different cultures, working hours, time zones, local conditions and languages 3/22/19 38
  • 39. 2.4 Project Life Cycle • Series of phases form initiation to closure • Provides the basic framework for managing a project • Phases can be broken down by: – Functional or partial objectives – Intermediate results or deliverables – Specific milestones – Financial availability – Generally time bounded • Range from predictive (waterfall) to adaptive (agile) 3/22/19 39
  • 40. Cost, Staffing and Risk During Phases • Low at start, peak as work is carried out, and drop as project is closed out • Risk and uncertainty is highest at beginning of project, but should decrease over the course of the project as decisions are reached and deliverables are accepted • Impact of changes on cost are lowest near the start of the project and highest near the end. • (“Fail Fast, Fail Early!”) 3/22/19 40
  • 41. Fig 2-8. Cost and Staffing 3/22/19 41From PMBOK
  • 42. Fig 2-9. Risk, Uncertainty and Cost 3/22/19 42From PMBOK
  • 43. 2.4.2.1 Phase Relationships • Sequential – Reduces uncertainty but may eliminate options for reducing overall schedule • Overlapping – Con: may increase risk if phases start before all info is in on last phase – Pro: may allow for compression of time and allow work in parallel. 3/22/19 43
  • 44. Fig 2-8. Characteristics of the Project Life Cycle 3/22/19 44From PMBOK
  • 45. 2.4.2.2 Predictive Life Cycles 3/22/19 45From PMBOK
  • 46. 2.4.2.2 Predictive Life Cycles • Project Scope, Time and Cost are determined early in project • Series of sequential or overlapping steps • Work in each phase is largely different in nature form other steps • Makeup and skills of team members vary from phase to phase 3/22/19 46
  • 47. 2.4.2.3 Iterative and Incremental Life Cycles • Preferred for Projects that are complex, and/or objectives and scope are likely to change. • Project phases (iterations) repeat as the project team’s understanding of project and product increases • ITERATIONS develop the PRODUCT through repeated cycles • INCREMENTS successively add FUNCTIONAITY to the product through repeated cycles • During an iteration: – all the activities will be performed – A set of deliverables is completed at the end of the iteration • Future iterations may enhance deliverables or create new ones • Each iteration builds deliverables until the exit criteria for project or phase is met. • Iterations allow project team to incorporate feedback form stakeholders 3/22/19 47
  • 48. Adaptive Life Cycles • AKA as change-driven or agile methods • Responsive to high levels of change and stakeholder involvement • Iterations are rapid (2-4 weeks) • Set of requirements into backlog • Beginning of iteration, high-priority items developed during iteration, based on the time within the iteration • End of iteration, Product demo to stakeholder(s) 3/22/19 48
  • 49. Adaptive Life Cycle 3/22/19 49 From https://bit.ly/2u5rNV8 , based on PMBOK
  • 50. 3. Project Management Processes • Each process is characterized by – Inputs – Tools and techniques to be applied – Outputs – To be considered: • Organizational process assets • Enterprise environmental factors 3/22/19 50
  • 51. To Ensure Project Success • Select appropriate processes to objectives • Define approach that can be adapted to meet requirements • Establish and maintain appropriate communication and engagement with stakeholders • Comply with requirements to meet stakeholder needs and expectations • Balance competing constraints of scope, schedule, budget, quality, resources, and risk 3/22/19 51
  • 52. Product vs. Project Processes • Project management processes – Ensure the effective flow of the project throughout its life cycle – Application of tools and techniques described in Chapters 4-13 (knowledge areas) – Generally applicable to all project management • Product-oriented processes – Specify and create the Product – Some processes may be product-specific – Product processes need to be known to effectively manage Project scope 3/22/19 52
  • 53. Five (5) Process Management Groups • PMBOK describes the nature of PM processes and the integration among them, their interactions and purposes. – Initiating process group – Planning process group – Executing process group – Monitoring and controlling process group – Closing process group 3/22/19 53
  • 54. Network of Process Groups • Common PM process interactions • PM process groups • Initiation process group • Planning process group • Executing process group • Monitoring and controlling process group • Closing process group • Project Information • Role of knowledge areas 3/22/19 54
  • 55. 3.1 Common Project Management Process Interactions • PM Processes are well-defined but in practice overlap and interact • Iterative and many processes are repeated during the project • The integrative nature of PM requires the monitoring and controlling process group to interact with the other process groups (see Fig 3-1) 3/22/19 55
  • 56. Fig 3-1. Monitoring and Controlling Process Group Interaction With Other Group Processes 3/22/19 56From PMBOK
  • 57. Linkage Among Process Groups • Process Groups are overlapping activities • Output of one process can be input to another process or a deliverable • May be incremental deliverables • Process group interaction is shown in Figure 3- 2. 3/22/19 57
  • 58. Fig 3-2: Process Group Interaction 3/22/19 58From PMBOK
  • 59. Project Management Process Interactions • Interactions can be – among process groups or – within process groups • Fig 3-3 is a summary of simple flow and interactions among process groups and stakeholders • PM processes are linked by INPUTS and OUTPUTS • Output(s) from one process becomes the input(s) to another process • Iterative nature of project management results in reuse of processes 3/22/19 59
  • 60. Fig 3-3 PM Process Interactions 3/22/19 60 From PMBOK
  • 61. Five (5) Process Management Groups • PMBOK describes each process group in sections 3.3-3.7 – 3.3 Initiating process group – 3.4 Planning process group – 3.5 Executing process group – 3.6 Monitoring and controlling process group – 3.7 Closing process group 3/22/19 61
  • 62. 3.3 Initiating Process Group • The processes in this process group involve authorization and start of project • Key purpose is to align stakeholders with the project’s purpose, and to involve them in the project going forward • Sets the vision for the project • Initial Scope defined • Initial finances committed • Project charter approved • Success criteria defined • Large and complex projects typically involve phases (ie, multiple Initiating processes for subsequent phases) 3/22/19 62
  • 63. 3.4 Planning Process Group • Processes to: – Define the total scope of the project – Define and refine objectives – Define actions to accomplish objectives • Key purpose is to set strategy, tactics and methods • Define and Develop Project management plans and other docs (deliverables). – Allow for “progressive elaboration” = significant changes in project can trigger changes in planning processes 3/22/19 63
  • 64. Project Management Plan • The project management plan and associated docs (deliverables) may include, but are not limited to: • Scope • Time • Cost • Quality • Communications 3/22/19 64 • Human resources • Risks • Procurements • Stakeholder engagement
  • 65. Updating • Generally, learning through each phase will suggest changes to the project (typically approved in the monitoring and controlling processes) • Updates to the project management plan and other docs will provide greater visibility into schedule, costs and other aspects of the project. • The organization has procedures to dictate when initial planning ends • Results in each iteration are documented as updates to the project management plan and other docs 3/22/19 65
  • 66. 3.5 Executing Process Group • Processes to complete the work defined in the project management plan – Coordinating people and resources – Manage stakeholder expectations – Performing and integrating activities • Key purpose is to execute on strategy, tactics and actions outlined in project management plan • Most of budget expended in these processes • Results from project execution may require planning updates and and rebaselining – Unanticipated risks – Further analysis 3/22/19 66
  • 67. 3.6 Monitoring and Controlling Process Group • Processes to track, review and manage the progress of project – Monitor (measure) and analyze project performance – ID variance with project management plan – Recommending and Controlling changes in anticipation of risks – Influencing decision makers to ensure only approved changes are implemented • Key purpose is to continuously monitor health of project and to trigger changes as new information surfaces 3/22/19 67
  • 68. 3.7 Closing Process Group • Processes to conclude all activities across all 5 project management process groups for formal completion of project, phase or contract • Processes may include, but are not limited to: – Obtain acceptance for closure by stakeholder(s) – Conduct review – Document lessons Learned – Update organizational procedures – Archive all docs – Close procurement activities and other agreements – Perform team assessments – Release project resources • Key purpose is to formally and visibly end project, phase or contract 3/22/19 68
  • 69. 3.8 Project Information • Distinction between DATA and INFORMATION • Data throughout project is analyzed and used as information in the project (esp. in the controlling processes) – Work performance data • Raw observations collected during project – Work performance information • Analyzed data – Work performance reports • Analyzed data captured in formal project documents 3/22/19 69
  • 70. 3.9 Role of Knowledge Areas • Ten (10) knowledge areas are used to classify the 47 PMBOK project management processes 3/22/19 70 • Project initiation management • Project scope management • Project time management • Project cost management • Project quality management • Project human resource management • Project communications management • Project risk management • Project procurement management • Project stakeholder management
  • 71. Ten (10) Knowledge Areas and Five (5) Process Group Relationship • PMBOK shows how Knowedge areas integrate with Process groups • More information in subsequent cahpters (4- 13) • Table 3-1 shows mapping of – 47 project management processes within the – 5 process groups and – 10 knowledge areas 3/22/19 71
  • 72. Table 3-1 PM Process Group Mapping to Knowledge Areas 3/22/19 72