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ELC 347 project management
Day 26
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Agenda Integrative Project Part 6 Due Any of the first five sections can be resubmitted for rescoring prior to finals week. The recorded score will the average of the original score and the score on the resubmitted section. Peer evaluations sent for IP projects Due Dec 10 AM Assignment 8 Due Dec 10 AM Quiz 4 Chap 12, 13 & 14 IP Project’s due IP presentations Today will discuss Project Evaluation and Control and Project Closeout and Termination
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In rating yourself and your team members, use a one- to five-point scale, where 5 = superior, 4 = above average, 3 = average, 2 = below average, and 1 = really weak. Add the scores to obtain a total score for yourself and the other group members. Put any comments you like on the bottom or back of this page. Fold this sheet when you complete the ratings below. Thank you. Put your name and your team members’ names in the spaces provided, one name at the top of each column. Names: Bob Carol Ted Alice Ratings: On time for all group meetings: Helped keep the group cohesive: Number of useful ideas contributed: Quantity of work done: Quality of work done: + Add Total Scores Here:
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Project Evaluation and Control
Chapter 13 © 2007 Pearson Education
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The Project Control Cycle
Setting a Goal Taking Action and Recycling the Process Measuring Progress Comparing Actual with Planned
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The Project S-Curve
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The Project S-Curve Cumulative Cost ($ in thousands)
Elapsed Time (in weeks) 10 5 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 50 60 $10,000 Negative Var Cumulative Budgeted Cost Cumulative Actual Cost
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Milestone Analysis
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Milestone Analysis Milestones are events or stages of the project that represent a significant accomplishment. Milestones signal the team and suppliers can motivate the team offer reevaluation points help coordinate schedules identify key review gates delineate work packages
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Tracking Gantt Chart Project status is updated by linking task completion to the schedule baseline
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Tracking Gantt Chart Gantt tracking.mpp
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Earned Value Management
Project S-Curves Cost Performance Schedule Cost Performance Schedule Earned Value Schedule Cost Performance Tracking Control Charts
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Earned Value Terms Planned value Earned value
Cost estimate Earned value Real cost to date based on activity performance <> value Actual cost of work performed Cumulative total cost Schedule performance index EV/PV Cost performance index EV/AC Budgeted cost at completion
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Steps in Earned Value Management
Clearly define each activity including its resource needs and budget Create usage schedules for activities and resources Develop a time-phased budget (PV) Total the actual costs of doing each task (AC) Calculate both the budget variance (CV) and schedule variance (SV)
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Earned Value Milestones
PV EV AC Slip Overspend Scheduled Performed Actual Budget Schedule Cost
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Earned Value Example Value 8=80%(10) Activity Jan Feb Mar April Plan
Staffing 8 7 15 100 Blueprint 4 6 10 80 Prototype 2 60 Design 3 33 1 Mon Plan 17 38 ∑ 30 Cmltv 21 Mon Act 11 13 Cmltv Act 19 27 40 Earned Value 30= Planned Value 38= Cumulative 40=
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Earned Value Example Schedule Variances
Planned Value (PV) = 38 = Earned Value (EV) = 30 = Schedule Performance Index = .79 = 30/38 = EV/PV Estimated Time to Completion = (1/.79)x4=5 Cost Variances Actual Cost of Work Performed (AC) = 40 = Cost Performance Index = .75 = 30/40 = EV/AC Estimated Cost to Completion = = (1/.75)x38 EVM.xls EVM.mpp
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Human Factors in Project Evaluation & Control
Optimistic progress reports Level of detail Process evaluation Non-technical performance measurement
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Critical Success Factors in the Project Implementation Profile
Project mission Top management support Project plans & schedules Client consultation Personnel Technical tasks Client acceptance Monitoring & feedback Communication channels Troubleshooting
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Project Close-Out and Termination
Chapter 14 © 2007 Pearson Education
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Project Termination All activities consistent with closing out the project Extinction Addition Integration Starvation
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Elements of Project Closeout Management
Putting it All to Bed Disbanding the Team Finishing Handing Gaining Acceptance for the Product Harvesting the Benefits Reviewing How The Work Over the It All Went
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Lessons Learned Meetings
Meeting Guidelines Establish clear rules of behavior Describe objectively what occurred Fix the problem, not the blame Common Errors Misidentifying systematic errors Misinterpreting lessons based on events Failure to pass along conclusions
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Closeout Paperwork Documentation Legal Cost Personnel
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Why are Closeouts Difficult?
Project sign off can be a de-motivator Constraints cause shortcuts on back-end Low priority activities Lessons learned analysis seen as bookkeeping Unique view of projects
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Dynamic Project Factors
Static Task-team Sponsorship Economics Environment User
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Early Warning Signs of Project Failure
Lack of viable commercial objectives Lack of sufficient authority to make decisions New product developed for stable market Low priority assigned to the project by management
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Early Termination Decision Rules
Costs exceed business benefits Failure to meet strategic fit criteria Deadlines are continually missed Technology evolves beyond the project’s scope
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The Top 10 Signs of IT Project Failure
10. Best practices and lessons learned are ignored 9. Project lacks people with appropriate skills 8. Sponsorship is lost 7. Users are resistant 6. Deadlines are unrealistic 5. Business needs change 4. Chosen technology changes 3. Project changes are poorly managed 2. Scope is ill-defined 1. Project managers don’t understand users’ needs
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Project Termination Issues
Emotional Intellectual Internal External Staff Client
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Claims & Disputes Two types of claims Ex-gratia claims
Default by the project company Resolved by Arbitration Binding Non-binding Standard litigation
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Protecting Against Claims
Consider claims as part of the project plan Verify stakeholders know their risks Keep good records throughout the life cycle Keep clear details of change orders Archive all correspondence
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Final Report Elements Project performance Administrative performance
Organizational structure Team performance Project management techniques Benefits to the organization and customer
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