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Published byAmice Hancock Modified over 9 years ago
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Managing Your IT Organization’s Costs with MS Project Karl Vantine www.pcubed.com
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Objectives 2.Explore some non-traditional uses of MS Project 1.Rethink the Project “User”
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What’s MS Project for anyway? Schedule Management – Usually Resource Management – Sometimes Cost Management – Rarely
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Then Who’s Using it? Project Managers for Scheduling Tasks – Usually So Why Not? Resource Managers for Tracking Work & Availability – Sometimes Finance & Accounting Managers for Tracking Costs – Rarely…Almost Never
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Cost is Trickier Project costs are fairly straightforward But coordinating organizational costs harder For example, how does one deal with… Cost Centers vs. Project Numbers Actual Labor Cost vs. Blended Rates Cash vs. Accrual Attributes Operating vs. Capital Expenses So how do we capture this stuff?
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Getting Started Find out… What costs your organization money? How you categorize those costs? Who’s responsible for managing them? How you plan for future costs? How you measure success? Then you have the ingredients for managing costs with MS Project…
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What Costs Money? Internal Labor: But not just time on projects, also upgrades, maintenance, bug fixes, training, etc. External Labor: Contractors, Consultants, etc. Equipment: Software, Hardware, Supplies, etc. Tool Tieback: Resource Type: work, material Task Type: admin tasks, recurring tasks (invoices or equipment payment) Custom Coding: contractor vs. consultant
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How are those Costs Organized? Project Costs? Cost Centers? Department? Cash or Accrual Accounting? Calendar or Fiscal Year? Rate Structure? Operating vs. Capital Expenses? Tool Tieback: Custom Codes to distinguish categories Payment Milestone Placement Blended Rates, Actual Rates, Role-based Rates Life Cycle Phases (labor) & HW/SW standards
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Who’s Accountable for Costs? Project Managers? Resource Managers? Cost Center Managers? Finance or Accounting Managers? Tool Tieback: Plan Ownership Views (Portfolio Analyzer vs. Resource Usage) Update Processes
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Planning for Future Costs Strategic vs. Operational Planning? Historical Trending, Lessons Learned? Resource or Deliverables focused? By Department, Program, Initiative, or Project? Tool Tieback: Multiple Baselines Templates Generic Resources Custom Coding
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Measuring Success Actual vs. Planned Earned Value ROI, IRR, NPV Tool Tieback: RYG Indicators Formulas Views – Outlook Integration, Portfolio Analyzer, Project Center (find out what’s used today & reproduce it) Can’t improve what you can’t measure.
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Sound like a lot of Work? Sure…so why Bother?
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Picture your Typical Scenario Project Effort managed in MS Project Actual Costs managed in LOB system Timesheets captured in another LOB system Costs forecast in Excel Manual Processes + Multiple Tools = Inaccuracy Confusion Extra WorkOutdated Data
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Wouldn’t it be Great if… Managers used same data (Project, Resource, & Finance) That data set was complete (cost & time) That data was real-time (LOB Interfaces) That data was kept in one place & accessed through one system Automation + Centralization = Accuracy …which facilitates better planning
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Demo
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Project 2002 Architecture Microsoft Project Server Microsoft SharePoint Portal Server Internal Business Systems Champions & Scheduler SQL Server CAL CAL Executives, Owners & Team Members Microsoft Project Professional Microsoft Web Access
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Questions For More Information Contact: Karl Vantine karl.vantine@pcubed.com
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