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Copyright Princeton University 2004. This work is the intellectual property of Princeton University. Permission is granted for this material to be shared for non-commercial, educational purposes, provided that this copyright statement appears on the reproduced materials and notice is given that the copying is by permission of the author. To disseminate otherwise or to republish requires written permission from the author.
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Project Management: A Critical Skill for IT Professionals Presented by Hetty Baiz Project Office, OIT Princeton University
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Background Princeton replaces administrative systems multiple projects cross-functional mutually Interdependent multi-million dollar investment Success and failure is no longer within the total control of a given project.
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What’s A Project? A “project” Will deliver –Business and/or technical objectives Is made up of – Defined processes & tasks Will run for – Set period of time Has a budget –Resources and $’s
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What is Project Success? The 'Golden Triangle' of Objectives Time Cost Project Success Project success occurs when we have: I I I I A delighted client (expectations met) Delivered the agreed objectives Met an agreed budget - $, resources etc. Within an agreed time frame and I Done it all professionally & without killing the team
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Why Do Projects Fail? Senior management show less than optimal commitment Scope not set or controlled Insufficient / inappropriate resources Estimates are wrong No risk or issues management Poor communication Time frames too ambitious or too long Inappropriate technology Lack of commitment / accountabilities not met by stakeholders
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Project Academic & Business Units Who Are Stakeholders? Outside Groups (Vendors) Team Members Information Technology Steering Committee Clients & UsersSenior Mgmt Interdependent Projects
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Project Management A Maturity Model Research by Carnegie Mellon University seat of the pants Success rate less than 30% aware e Success rate of 30 to 45% Success rate of 45 to 75% Success rate better than 75% best practice competent seat of pants awareaware
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Competent Methodology and standards are well established and supported Stakeholders understand and accept roles Discrete measures support good management Projects are set up and managed end-to-end Risks are clearly defined and controlled
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Why Should We Care? To Increase the likelihood that projects will : –be done on time and within budget –meet people’s expectations –be done well
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Project Office Mission To enable the successful implementation of OIT initiatives in a way that establishes a project management culture so that we deliver projects on time, within budget and with expected results.
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How? Define a Princeton Project Management Methodology (PPMM) Support and Mentor Offer Training Facilitation, Audit, Review
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Princeton Project Office Methodology Consulting/Mentoring Education/Training Continuous Improvement
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Project Management Process Initiation Complete & Assess Tracking & Control Reporting Review Planning Initiation Plan Detailed Plan Status Report Post Project Review Report
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Management Techniques To increase the likelihood of project success you must manage: Stakeholders Risks Issues Change
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Manage Stakeholders A stakeholder is any person or group who, if their support were to be withdrawn, could cause the project to fail. - Get them involved - Keep them informed - Gain their endorsement
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How to Manage Stakeholders Identify stakeholders Involve in planning Establish expectations / accountabilities Formal communication Gain sign-off Change and issues resolution Project reviews Define project completion
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Risk Management What is “risk”? Any factor capable of causing the project to go off track. Develop, monitor, implement Risk Plan
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Issues Management Unresolved issues will drive a project towards failure and consume a significant part of a project manager’s time. Stakeholders play key role in issues management and resolution Establish Issues log, review, escalation process
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Change Management Uncontrolled changes to a project will probably account for up to 30% of a project’s total effort. If these changes are not managed, the project will be viewed to be over time and over budget. Establish a Change Management Process
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PPMM Summary Overview
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Initiation Plan Status Report Audit Report Post phase assessment Detail Work Plan Process
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PPMM Tools Office 2000 –Word –Excel –Access MS Project 2000
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Recommended Best Practices (Lessons Learned in managing projects at Princeton University) Project Planning and Management Follow proven methodologies Active Executive/Project Sponsor Identify / revisit “critical success” factors Document assumptions –Business process change vs. customization
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Recommended Best Practices Project Planning and Management Have technical staff in place at start-up Plan for backfill Involve Steering Committee early Plan production support in central offices Plan for applying fixes Plan for “end of project” Plan for vacation/sick time
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Recommended Best Practices Scheduling, Tracking and Control Break large projects into phases (no > 18 - 24 months total) Control phase “bleed over” Post phase assessments “Go/No Go” decision points Sponsor sign-off Review Scope periodically
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Recommended Best Practices Scheduling, Tracking and Control Building learning curve into plans Weekly team meetings Detail planning in 1-2 month segments Define and manage to “critical path” –What’s important –Prioritize –Who, what, when
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Recommended Best Practices Reporting Establish monthly status reporting Hold monthly status reviews with key stakeholders –Oral status reports are effective Keep users of system (middle managers) informed
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Recommended Best Practices Resourcing Resource Plan Cross functional teams work Co-locate teams Projects are full time job Complete training before prototyping Have full team train together Leverage investment Build team spirit
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Recommended Best Practices Managing Expectations Communication Plan Make major policy decisions up front Don’t make promises to users up front Monthly status report and review Monthly / bi-monthly presentations Articles, web pages, newsletters Special communications from sponsor Focus groups, demos, town meetings
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Recommended Best Practices Promoting the System Focus Groups during gap analysis Demos for every user after first release Executive Sponsor showed support Town meetings to endorse system Major presentation to users
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Recommended Best Practices Methodology Follow proven methodologies Consolidate methodology ( pre-kick off ) Functional reps go to all prototyping Use standard report formats Co-locate developer with tester (short term)
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For more information…... Contact the OIT Project Office (609) 258-6335 Send e-mail to hetty@princeton.edu hetty@princeton.edu Visit our web site at… www.princeton.edu/ppo
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