Effective Project Management Barbara Stone & Jodie Mathies November 8, 2007.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Project Management Basics for Busy Geeks Meri Williams.
Advertisements

Facilitated by Joanne Fraser RiverSystems
Work Breakdown Structures
Improving Executive Engagement Project Leaders Group Adrian Boyd, 7 th June 2011.
3-1 © Prentice Hall, 2004 Chapter 3: Managing the Object-Oriented Information Systems Project Object-Oriented Systems Analysis and Design Joey F. George,
The CRM Textbook: customer relationship training Terry James © 2006 Chapter 11: Management.
Stoimen Stoimenov QA Engineer SitefinityLeads, SitefinityTeam6 Telerik QA Academy Telerik QA Academy.
INFO 638Lecture #81 Software Project Management Cycle plan and build INFO 638 Glenn Booker.
Chapter 10 Schedule Your Schedule. Copyright 2004 by Pearson Education, Inc. Identifying And Scheduling Tasks The schedule from the Software Development.
Project Control Techniques
Monitoring and Control
Project Perfect Pty Ltd Project Administrator Overview of Software.
Project Plans CSCI102 - Systems ITCS905 - Systems MCS Systems.
Jump to first page Dr. Henry Deng Assistant Professor MIS Department UNLV IS 488 Information Technology Project Management.
Project Time Management
Chapter 3: The Project Management Process Groups
Chapter 5: Project Scope Management
Readiness Index – Is your application ready for Production? Jeff Tatelman SQuAD October 2008.
Advanced Project Management Project Plan Templates
 A project is “a unique endeavor to produce a set of deliverables within clearly specified time, cost and quality constraints”
How to integrate the parts of your project to achieve success.
IT Project Management Cheng Li, Ph.D. August 2003.
10 Aug 2010 ECE/BENG-492 SENIOR ADVANCED DESIGN PROJECT Meeting #2.
PowerPoint Presentation for Dennis, Wixom, & Tegarden Systems Analysis and Design with UML, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights.
Software Project Management Introduction to Project Management.
University of Sunderland COM369 Unit 8 COM369 Project Monitoring and Control Unit 8.
Resources Performance time. resources Performance time 2.
Project Tracking. Questions... Why should we track a project that is underway? What aspects of a project need tracking?
Prof. Roy Levow Session 9.  Defining the APF  An Overview of the APF  The APF Core Values.
Project Management, Bus Wk. 8 Agenda.
Objective 2.02 Utilize project-management skills to improve workflow and minimize costs.
This material is approved for public release. Distribution is limited by the Software Engineering Institute to attendees. Sponsored by the U.S. Department.
1 Project Management Introduction. 2 Chap 1 What is the impact? 1994: 16% of IT projects completed “On-Time” 2004 : 29% of IT projects “On- Time” 53%
Project Post-Mortem University of California Berkeley Extension Copyright © 2008 Patrick McDermott From an AutoContent Wizard 10/27/2007.
Copyright 2008 Introduction to Project Management, Second Edition 2  Many people have heard the following sayings: ◦ If you fail to plan, you plan to.
BSBPMG505A Manage Project Quality Manage Project Quality Project Quality Processes Diploma of Project Management Qualification Code BSB51507 Unit.
Metrics 2.0 Rick A. Morris, PMP, OPM3, MCITP
2/21/06 Page 1Loui Some Notes from Berkun Art of Project Management CS436 (material for quiz)
Chapter 2 Iterative, Evolutionary, and Agile You should use iterative development only on projects that you want to succeed. - Martin Fowler 1CS
Lecture 3 Title: Information Technology Project Methodology By: Mr Hashem Alaidaros MIS 434.
1 Advanced Project Management Project Plan Templates Ghazala Amin.
Effective Project Management Barbara Stone & Jodie Mathies August 30, 2007.
GLOBAL SCHOOL OF PROJECT MANAGEMENT UNIVERSITY FOR INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION Ing. Osvaldo A. Martínez Gómez, MAP, MSc. Essential Topics - Project Management.
Rational Unified Process Mr Hisham AlKhawar. Iterative versus Waterfall  We need to use a life cycle model in order to approach developing a system easily,
Presented by © Advanced Management Services, Inc Adaptive Project Framework A Common Sense Approach to Managing Complexity and Uncertainty Robert.
Project Management All projects need to be “managed” –Cost (people-effort, tools, education, etc.) –schedule –deliverables and “associated” characteristics.
STEP 4 Manage Delivery. Role of Project Manager At this stage, you as a project manager should clearly understand why you are doing this project. Also.
Apply Quality Management Techniques Project Quality Processes Certificate IV in Project Management Qualification Code BSB41507 Unit Code BSBPMG404A.
Project Management MLP, Careers & Employability Division.
Meeting Management/Planning. Today Go over basics of meeting management Introduce key elements of creating a plan.
Introducing Project Management Update December 2011.
AP-1 4. Agile Processes. AP-2 Agile Processes Focus on creating a working system Different attitude on measuring progress XP Scrum.
February 15, 2004 Software Risk Management Copyright © , Dennis J. Frailey, All Rights Reserved Simple Steps for Effective Software Risk Management.
College of Public Health and Human Sciences Communicating About Public Health Policy Presenter: Craig Mossbaek Date: August 22, 2013 Public Health Policy.
BSBPMG404A Apply Quality Management Techniques Apply Quality Management Techniques Project Quality Processes C ertificate IV in Project Management
CS 5150 Software Engineering Lecture 2 Software Processes 1.
Test status report Test status report is important to track the important project issues, accomplishments of the projects, pending work and milestone analysis(
Resources - Agenda Training - In Scope Thinking ahead Envisioning an outcome Communications Basic plans Risk identification Issue Identification CAP.
CREATING GREAT STANDS: A STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE TO CREATING A TEAM’S MOST VALUABLE TOOL DFA Coaches DoLE Team.
PMI Evening Event - Preston / Dec 2007 Spotting & catching problem projects before it's too late Neil Johnson Project & Programme Management Capability.
Project Management Enabling Quality Marien de Wilde, PMP April 2007.
P3 Business Analysis. 2 Section F: Project Management F1.The nature of projects F2. Building the Business Case F4. Planning,monitoring and controlling.
Insert name of presentation on Master Slide The Quality Improvement Guide Insert Date here Presenter:
Presenter Name Presentation Date
Presenter Name Presentation Date
Presenter Name Presentation Date
Presenter Name Presentation Date
Presenter Name Presentation Date
Presenter Name Presentation Date
Presentation transcript:

Effective Project Management Barbara Stone & Jodie Mathies November 8, 2007

2 Agenda Feedback on presentations and project docs Scott Berkun Controlling Change management Prioritization & ranking Quality Assurance - metrics Communication Adaptive Project Framework (APF)

3 Comments from Status / Project Plan documents (1) Traffic Lights : Need one for overall project status, not just individual milestones. Overall project status color is not an average. When in doubt, choose the worst color. If a task has not yet begun, it does not have a color, unless it was scheduled and is late. Marking things red or yellow when they are scheduled to take place at a later date puts management attention on the wrong things.

4 Comments from Status / Project Plan documents (2) Budget review: The time people spend is part of your budget; often the greatest part. When giving status, make sure to include the whole budget; your audience is very interested in whether the effort is taking more staff time than planned

5 Comments from Status / Project Plan documents (3) Gantt / WBS for Project communication: A Gantt chart without the task names is essentially useless as a communication tool and that goes for charts that extend over multiple pages; adjust the timescale to make it fit Generally it is better to show a Gantt at a summarized task level than to have multiple pages or tiny unreadable font. Choose carefully what to print; columns like id & predecessor generally don’t add anything to the presentation. If you have a column printed after the task on the Gantt, don’t include it as a column (ex: resource name).

6 Comments from Status / Project Plan documents (4) Communication Plan OK to extend generic communication formation to include documents external to project group (though Jodie would not include documents that are product of the project) If you do, need to include dates for delivery

7 Comments from Status / Project Plan documents (5) Formatting / Editing: What story do you want to tell? You tell that story two ways: Content: Simple, clear, and consistent information about the project Format: Think about how the look of your presentation helps you tell that story. Here are just a few of the world of articles on ‘bad PowerPoint’ out there: pptsurvey_article.htmhttp:// pptsurvey_article.htm

8 What phase is your project in? Probably still Execution. You, as a Project Manager, are probably still Monitoring and Controlling: Tracking task and milestone status Meeting with your team and stakeholders Working issues Working risks

9 Scott Berkun – Making things happen Priorities make things happen – making lists, priority 1 & the rest Say no Keep it real Know the critical path Be relentless Be savvy

10 Prioritization & Ranking - issues What problem are we trying to solve? If there are multiple problems, which are most important? Think Pareto. How does the problem relate to or impact our goals? What is the simplest way to fix this that will allow us to meet our goals?

11 Ways to say no No, that doesn’t fit our priorities No, only if we have time No, only if you make happen No, next release No. Never. Ever. Really.

12 ‘Savvy’ = Flexible: you adjust. What communication style fits the situation? What is the humor culture of the team? How do arguments get won? (data? Force of personality? Etc) Who is effective at what I need to have happen? What values are most important to this person or group? What is the overall organizational culture?

13 Guerilla tactics Know who has authority Go to the source Switch communication modes Get people alone Hunt people down Hide Get advice Call in favors, beg & bribe Play people off each other Stack the deck Buy people coffee & tasty things

14 Every team member should know: Most important: Goal Objective Work item Metric Stay focused on what’s most important Know the critical path

15 Team works on project deliverable Strong sense of what they are doing Why it’s the most important thing to do next How it relates to what others are doing How quickly it must be done

16 Team tries not to work on project ‘process’ deliverables Bureaucracy - An administrative system in which the need or inclination to follow rigid or complex procedures impedes effective action One of the jobs of the PM is to shelter the team from administrative process that does not further the work of building the product.

17 Why people get annoyed Assume I’m an idiot Don’t trust me Waste my time Manage me without respect Make me listen to or read stupid things

18 Process Pros Improves the odds of the project being completed Has benefits that outweigh its costs Cons Any idiot with authority gets to create them Observations of the past emphasized over needs of the present

19 Checklist for good processes Accelerate progress Prevent problems Make important actions visible and measurable Include a process for changing or eliminating the process People impacted by them are in favor of them

20 The power of Communication Weapon Self-destruction

21 Meeting standards Are the right people in the room? Sit or stand? Laptops & gadgets – “I have a strong bias against the use of gadgets and laptops during meetings. If the people in the room don’t think what’s going on is important enough to warrant their full attention, then they shouldn’t be in the room.” Being on time End with clear steps & owners

22 Adaptive Project Framework ‘Core values’ Client-focused Client-driven Incremental results early and often Change is progress to a better solution Don’t speculate on the future

23 APF

24 Some key takeaways: Requirements: High-level requirements early on; revisited and re-prioritized with each cycle Detailed requirements only for the functionality to be produced in current cycle Budget: Fixed; job is to create the most value for cost/time.

25 Prioritization & Ranking - scope More requirements are not always better Which are the most important – which provide highest business value? Think Pareto – 80/20

26 Discussion: How do you know ahead of time how many cycles you can do in this project? What are some projects that require TPM (‘waterfall’) as opposed to an iterative approach? Can you ever not revisit scope?

27 Discussion: What approach have you used for your project for this class? Why?

28 Assignments for next class Read Saying no, a short course for managersSaying no, a short course for managers Research the Pareto theory and write a few paragraphs on the implications for your project to hand in Read Effective Project Management, chapter 11