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Project from start to finish
Jan Bollen
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Agenda Projects examples, types improvising vs routine
Phasing, managing Project plan and chapters, Gantt diagram Methodological design, Stakeholders V-model Waterfall Scrum, structured activities Project setup SMART Boundaries, project organisation Team roles, team meetings Choices, Morphological design
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Projects, examples Building a bridge Developing a new product
Developing a marketing plan Reducing waiting lists at hospitals Doing a theater production Conducting research for a thesis Organizing a pop festival Implementing software at a company Setting up a website ……..
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Use the book ! English 198 pages ISBN Buy or borrow it
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Projects, types
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Projects, improvising vs routine
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Projects, phasing It needs structure and sequence
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Managing a Project Project plan Project goals / SMART Planning / Gantt
People / Roles Methodology / V model / Waterfall / Scrum Milestones Product
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Project plan mindmap
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Project plan chapters Background info
Where (in what environment) will the project be carried out? Project results Why carry out this project and what is the desired final result? Project activities What do we need to do to achieve the project goal? Project limits What are the boundaries of the project? The products What are the intermediate products? Quality control How can we ensure the sufficient quality of all products? Project organization Who is participating and how do we plan to collaborate? Schedule Who is doing what / when? Costs and benefits What will the project cost and what will it yield? Risks What could cause the project to fail?
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Gantt diagram Time versus activities and milestones
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Why? Methodological design
Minimization of Project Risks Improvement and Guarantee of Quality Reduction of Total Cost over the entire project Improvement of communication between all Stakeholders
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Stakeholders Operator Manufacturer Seller Transporter Maintainer
Dismantler
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Principles of methodological design
Think first, then act! Think through project in detail from start to finish AND from finish to start. Work from global to detail Top-down working First the big picture Then the details!
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V-model
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Waterfall
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Scum
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V model Structured activities
Research / know all the details of the original coffee maker machine Designing / How will the new machine work and look like Realising / Producing the new machine Testing / Does it work yes or no? / Is the Client and User satisfied?
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Project setup, SMART
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Specific Who Who is involved? What What do I want to accomplish?
Where Identify a location. When Establish a time frame. Which Identify requirements/constraints. Why Specific reasons, purpose or benefits of accomplishing the goal.
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Measurable How much? How many?
How will I know when it is accomplished?
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Acceptable The goal is “do-able” It is action-oriented It is “within reach” of mortals!
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Realistic The goal must be an objective toward which you are both willing and able to work. Again, it must be “do-able” People must believe it can be accomplished
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Time bounded You should establish a timeframe
The timeframe must be realistic Everyone needs to know the timeframe…make it public
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SMART example
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demo or ready for production
Project boundaries Start of project Start date Project Boundaries Time / start end Money / budget Product / demo or ready for production Activity End of project End date
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Project Organization Main functions in a project organization:
Project leader Secretary / documentation Members Each function should be described: Tasks Responsibilities
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Team roles (separate ppt)
Team player Innovator Expert Executive Analyst Driver Chairman Completer Explorer
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Team meetings (separate ppt)
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Choices are important Use a morphologic overview
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Morphologic overview
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Morphological example
Horizontal: Options Vertical: Items / functions / key parameters
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Morphological coffee maker
Horizontal: Options Vertical: Items / functions / key parameters Make choices clear
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