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Welcome to: East Renfrewshire Council Public Service Excellence Accreditation Award Unit 1 – Project Justification Delivered by: ERC Programme Management Office (Chief Executive’s Department) Domestic Arrangements • Fire regulations • Mobile phones • Breaks • Toilets • Smoking Introductions • What’s your name, service? • What do you want to get out of the course? • What project are you working on? • Who or what would you take to a desert island? Course Objectives By the end of this course you will have an overview & understanding of: • • • • • • Project management Project management methodologies How to produce the rationale for a project How to assess the viability of a project proposal How to prepare for project implementation Other key elements to consider before embarking on a project Session One Overview of Project Management Session 1: Overview of Project Management What is a project? “A unique set of coordinated activities, with definite starting and finishing points, undertaken by an individual or team to meet specific objectives within defined time, cost and performance parameters.” Office of Government Commerce What is a Project? • Drives change • Non-routine • Unique • Often complex involving risk and uncertainty • Composed of a collection of connected activities • Often delivered by people who would not normally work together • Finite • Intended to achieve specific and agreed outcomes What is Project Management? Project management can mean a lot of things: Planning • Thinking ahead • Identifies tasks • Identifies timescales • Identifies key milestones (deliverable or achievement) • Resources • Dependencies Monitoring • Constant review of the plan, issues and risks • Anticipating changes or threats • Observation • Meetings • Communication More... What is Project Management? Control of all aspects of the project • • • • Documentation Meetings Observation Governance The motivation of all those involved to achieve the objectives on time to the specified cost, quality & performance • • • • • • Project team work Creating a common project goal Benefits to be delivered Personal responsibility Personal achievement Personal recognition More... What is Project Management? Using common sense and a structured approach to achieve successful outcomes • Decisions made on facts • How the project is managed • Tasks to be performed • Organisational fit Group exercise What projects have succeeded / failed? Why did they succeed / fail? Why do Projects Fail? Most common reasons for project failure are: • Weak or little governance - Ensuring the project is on track - Prompt decision making - Lack of planning and structure • Lack of Trade Union involvement in the project journey • Overconfidence • Lack of confidence • Poor team work • Having unrealistic expectations • Lack of management / sponsor support, direction / guidance • Poor communication • Poor project scope • Insufficient resources • Having the wrong people involved in the project • Having too much reliance on one person Session Two Project Management Methodologies Session 2: Project Management Methodologies There are many formal project management methodologies: • PRINCE2 (PRojects IN Controlled Environments) Business case Customer/ supplier relationship Scope of methodology • Small project management Simple and consistent approach for managing small projects • Structured Systems Analysis and Design Method (SSADM) Best suited to IT development projects • Rapid Application Development (RAD) Potentially quicker and less costly Session 2: Project Management Methodologies Project management methodologies vary in scale and complexity, but all are based around a small core of common sense principles. • PRINCE2 • Six Sigma • Lean • Kaizen At East Renfrewshire Council, we use our own methodology which incorporates many of the above methods. Please bear in mind that further research will be needed on project management methodologies as part of your assessments! East Renfrewshire Methodology The East Renfrewshire 5 Stage Programme / Project Delivery System with Change Management The East Renfrewshire methodology is a hybrid of the previously mentioned methods. It has been simplified for local authority use. Evaluation Project Prep Final Prep Redesign Go Live & Support Start PID – Project Rationale, Context Project start up ‘to be ‘ mapping Testing Implement Scope Org Change Training Lessons learned Initial Business Case Benefits Process change Readiness reviews Realise benefits Approval ICT change Approval Communication Post go live support ‘as is’ baseline ‘as’ is process mapping Planning Controlling Planning Tracking Reviewing Reporting Communication Change Management Project Initiation Document What is a PID? • A PID is a: Project Initiation Document • - • It is the single most important piece of documentation: to be produced at the start of the project should continually be updated during the course of the project It should include details of the vision, objectives and scope. In East Renfrewshire we would expect the PID to include the following: ERC Project Initiation Document (PID) • Header sheet • Risk issue dependency log • Document control • • Project background High level project milestones • Project vision • Key task plan • Project objectives • Action List • Roles, resources and skills • Flash report • ‘In scope’ and ‘out of scope’ • Business policy changes • Project change request log • Project governance • Communication plan • Baseline profile • Project partnerships • ‘To be’ profile • Business case • Measures of success • Readiness sign off • Lessons learned • Project document repository • Post project review Tea and Coffee Session Three Case Study: Project Rationale There was a Council far, far away called… Surbiton Star employee is: Mrs Cannaegetabrek Here is her story… 08:30 Need to drive to the office to get my schedule for today! “Stop interrupting me – I’m only in to check my diary!” 08:45 09:15 Set out to visit first client of the day “I thought you’d be here earlier!” 09:30 10:00 “It would have been nice if you had told me in advance when you were coming!” Write up notes of client visit in car while I remember! “I can’t believe I’ll need to do this again… later!” 12:00 Go back to office and type up morning client notes “But when am I going to get all these paper notes filed?” “Will need to do my travel expenses” “All this to and fro – I can’t get to see all my clients!” “Aaaaaaah!!!!!” Group Exercise What is the project opportunity here? 1. What’s wrong in this situation? 2. What would you change? Session 3: Outcome 1- Produce the Rationale for a Project Rationale: When you provide the rationale for a project, you must explain the compelling case for change in terms of the existing and future operational needs of the organisation. Project context: Background information about the project and why the project needs to happen. Session 3: Outcome 1- Produce the Rationale for a Project Vision: Define the one major high level outcome of the project. Project objectives: Objectives are more detailed statements and set out specific, tangible deliverables that the project should achieve as it progresses. Scope: Boundaries should be set for what is included and not included in a project. The Council has 5 depts including Social Work Dept. Social Work Dept has 1,000 employees. Majority of service users live in Surbiton Council area. 60% of service users are ‘vulnerable’ - i.e. would benefit from case notes being updated real time, as conditions can change quickly & full information on status is important. The Council has no procedures in place for Agile Working. 75% of Social Work employees are FRONTLINE WORKERS: • Out of the office more than 50% of the working week • Time split between fixed desk, travel and clients • Core role should include maximum ‘client facing time’ 25% of Social Work employees are DESK BASED WORKERS: • Work constantly in same office • Sit at desk 100% of time - PC workstation & phone extension allocated specifically to them • Require access to corporate systems to perform their role • Employees include management & business support staff The dept uses 10 building across the authority: • Red building is shared with Environment Dept – Social Work use 10% of the building’s capacity. • Yellow and Red buildings are in a state of disrepair & are used only by Social Work staff. • 7 remaining buildings in decent state and occupied only by Social Work staff. • When Frontline Workers are out in field, there is free desk space in all 10 buildings for at least 50% of each day. Group Exercise Project Vision, Objectives, Scope 1. Write down what the vision of this project might be? 2. Write down what the objectives of this project might be? 3. Write down what might be in-scope & out of scope for the project WHY? Session 3: Outcome 1- Produce the Rationale for a Project Lessons Learned: Do not repeat the same mistakes! “ Because part of my project required significant investment, I should have submitted a Capital Bid to secure the funds but I didn’t know this and I missed the deadline. I had to wait another year to get my request looked at”. “ When I wanted to commission a service as part of my project, I didn’t know that the value of the contract was so high that I needed to do a European tender! This caused major slippage in my project plan as I hadn’t prepared for this level of Procurement engagement”. “The devices have some benefits I suppose but the main thing I needed from using a device on the beat was to fingerprint suspects at the scene of a crime to speed up identification and get to see record information more quickly”. Group Exercise Lessons Learned Complete the Lessons Learned Log based on the 3 sets of feedback. - Describe the lesson to be learned - Detail the action that needs to be taken to mitigate the lesson learned - - Who owns the action When will the actions be complete Lessons Learned Do not repeat the same mistakes! • Be clear on the scope of the project- remind people of this throughout • Clearly define success criteria • Ensure budget planning and monitoring • Ensure management are committed • - Provide sufficient training and testing Link to processes • Ensure support post implementation • Good team working is key Cross council teams Communication • Ownership • Not enough attention to detail Session 3: Outcome 1- Produce the Rationale for a Project Measures of success: The criteria that will be used to determine the success of the project upon completion, for example time, budget, or quality. Measures of Success Project Deliverable End to end times Customer satisfaction Employee attrition rate As Is Measure To Be Measure What have you achieved? September 2013: Resulted in creating 0.2 capacity January 2013: Have reduced end to end time by within team. Resource will be Take 40 days from a customer 25 days – now takes 15 days used to cover staff absences in requesting service to the service from a customer requesting team and reduce amount of TOIL actually being delivered. service to the service actually being accrued. being delivered. Reduction of 9 complaints Number of customer complaints between 2012 – 13. Need to December 2013: for past 4 years sitting at: monitor over subsequent years. Customer complaints for year 59. May be able to track cost 2009 = 50, 2010=65, 2011=72, Continue to track reduction as a result of 2012=68 eliminating ‘failure’ activities. Positive reputational impact – become Employer of Choice for this service. September 2013: January 2013: Staff turnover on track to be Improved motivation levels of Current staff turnover rate is reduced to 8% for this. staff. 10% of FTE Headcount per year Need to re-measure 2014. Cost reduction of £xx as a result of reduced overtime. DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 1 Assessment Task 6a Cross Reference Outcome 3 Assessment Task 14f Lunch Welcome Back! Say what you see! Session Four Assess the viability of a project proposal Session 4: Outcome 2- Assess the viability of a project proposal Preparing a Business case “A business case captures the reasoning for initiating a project. It often takes the form of a well presented written document or presentation.” What needs to be considered for a business case? • What are the costs? • What are the savings? • Length of the payback period • Sources of funding • Options appraisal • What are the non-financial benefits/ potential impacts? “Do the benefits outweigh the costs? Is it the right thing for the business to do?” Costs • Capital / one-off Costs - usually associated with spending on assets - examples include purchase of land & IT systems • Revenue / operational recurring costs - running costs to keep the project going - examples include staff costs & licences Savings Savings • Revenue savings - saving money through productivity, overtime reduction, mileage reduction etc • One off capital receipt - this could be the sale of property or land • Income generation - bringing more money into the Council via a new service or developing an existing service Payback Savings • The payback period is the time it takes to recover the initial cost of the project • The usual acceptable period for payback is between 1-3 years • Depending on the size and nature of the project this period may be extended to 5 years • Not all methods of funding require to be paid back Funding sources • Department budget: Funded and approved within the current department funds by the departmental Director. • Spend to save: Funded and approved within annually agreed ERC funds by the Director of Finance or equivalent (requires payback). • Modernisation fund: Funded within annually agreed ERC funds by the Director of Finance or equivalent and approved by CMT. Funding is a one-off resource & bids have to link closely to the PSE principles (doesn’t require payback, but where savings can be demonstrated they must be given up in the budget process). • Capital programme: Reviewed by the corporate asset management group and approved by the ERC cabinet. This aligns to the yearly budget setting process. • Grants: External funding may be available through external sources, for example grants can be Government funded. Options Appraisal • Required to assess the best option • You need to prepare a business case for each option • Options will vary depending on the project however most will fall into the following pattern : 1. Do nothing 2. Partly implement a change 3. Fully implement a change • A recommended option is then presented to the sponsor having considered both financial and non-financial factors Business case process Sponsor requests project and appoints PM PM Monitor Costs Savings Payback Consider sources of funding Project started Share information of approval with relevant staff/ stakeholders Department Budget (Sponsor approves) Spend to save (Finance Director Approves) Capital Request (CAMG approves) Option Appraisal Approved Consult with finance BP Project stopped Present to sponsor Agree source of funding Rejected Project Initiation Document Modernisation Fund (CMT approves) Grants (External) Glossary of Terms • Investment - initial funding required to get a project up and running • Recurring costs - costs that will continue on a recurring basis once the project is up and running • Savings - arise as a result of costs decreasing or no longer being required due to the project being implemented • Income - where income is generated as a result of the project. E.g. a new charge is levied for a service • Payback period - the length of time it takes to recover the initial cost of the project • Option appraisal - from a financial perspective comparing possible outcomes looking at the costs and the payback period Other Impact Factors for Business Case PSE Principles • Better customer experience • Delivering through digital services • Improving assets and agile working • Processes simplified and standardised Outcomes Efficiencies Customers People Session 5: Outcome 3: Prepare for project implementation • Project management processes and roles • Project organisation structures • Project reporting arrangements • Record keeping and audit requirements • Project planning techniques Project Management Processes Evaluation Project Prep Redesign Final Prep Go Live & Support East Renfrewshire Methodology The East Renfrewshire 5 Stage Programme / Project Delivery System with Change Management Evaluation Project Prep Final Prep Redesign Go Live & Support Start PID – Project Rationale, Context Project start up ‘to be ‘ mapping Testing Implement Scope Org Change Training Lessons learned Initial Business Case Benefits Process change Readiness reviews Post go live support Approval Approval ‘as is’ baseline ‘as’ is process mapping Planning Controlling Planning Tracking Reviewing Reporting Communication Change Management Project Initiation Document Project Roles Project Sponsor The Chief Executive, Deputy Chief Executive, Director or Head of Service proposing and driving the project. This role is generally accountable for the achievement of the desired business benefit. Role may be delegated. Council Stakeholders The council services and activities impacted by project execution. This role is generally responsible for implementing any required business process change as well as mitigating risks to their respective business area and conducting testing prior to deployment. PSE Board A cross-service team including Chief Executive, Deputy Chief Executive, Directors and Heads of Service from within the Council. This team is primarily responsible for assessing, recommending and approving the addition of projects or programmes to the East Renfrewshire portfolio. Steering Group A cross-service team including appointed by Chief Executive, Deputy Directors and Heads of service from within the Council to shape the change programme, drive projects, manage dependencies and delivery, problem solve, escalate issues to the CMT and recommend support/resources as required. They will also be expected to communicate within their respective services/departments. Is now DMT Programme Manager This role is accountable for successful delivery of the overall programme including the management of multiple projects , the involvement of extended council stakeholders, and the integration of IT and business process. Project Manager This role is accountable for successful delivery of a specific project which may be a part of a larger programme. This role drives the project manages the plan and ensures timely completion of project activities. Project Assistant This person is responsible for the maintenance of the project plan, and maintenance and updating of the project documentation and website (if appropriate). They provide administrative support to the project manager. Project Team Members (Subject Matter Experts) This team is specifically responsible for gathering and confirming requirements from the various services and defining the resulting process. They also work on the project. This team also drives the process change within the business area during implementation of the solution and conducts testing Programme Management Office (PMO) The PMO is primarily responsible for controlling the Programme / Project Delivery System and supporting the programs or projects in the successful delivery of the solution. The PMO is responsible for ensuring budget discipline, timely execution, consistency of tools and approach plus overall quality. The PMO is also accountable for successful delivery of multiple projects group within a Release, and responsible for Release risk management and change management across the multiple projects. Project Team This is a cross-service team dedicated to the delivery of a specific project or programme. This team will include dedicated IT resources if IT involved. Application Support Team This team is the Council IT organisation primarily responsible supporting the applications after successful deployment. IT Infrastructure Team This team is the internal Council IT organisation primarily responsible for the design, deployment, testing, and on-going management of infrastructure elements such as servers, security, data mgmt, network, team rooms to support filing project and documentation storage etc. Council Business Application Team This team is the internal Council IT organisation who is primarily responsible for the solution design, configuration, development, function / unit testing and IT Interface testing, and interlock with any Third party IT Providers /Vendor Mgmt. They are also responsible for the solution design, configuration, development, and testing of data solutions. They would also provide capability to create project rooms to manage the project information and documentation. This team is also accountable for integration across the ICT roles. Particularly key if IT involved with the need to involve application teams, test, infrastructure, authorisation, change management, move to production, and post production support for a project Release. Customer First Lagan Development Team This team is responsible for all business configuration, system build and testing of Lagan CRM. Third-Party Provider External providers of software, consulting, and/or implementation services. These providers must interlock with PMO. Also manages supplier requests HR Business Partner This team is responsible for assisting in matters such as job evaluation, trade union consultation, organisational restructures etc. Procurement Partner Responsible for contracts, assisting development of tenders etc. Finance Business Partner Responsible for assisting in providing baseline and financial budget information to departments. Programme Management Office (PMO) Responsible for the pulling together of finance business partners and providing financial knowledge to the project. Also responsible for business case development. Project Team - Resources & Skills Project Role Name Support Responsibilities Support Period Comments DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 3 Assessment Task 10a Cross Reference Outcome 3 Assessment Task 12b Project Organisation Structures Project Governance (Structure / Reporting / Roles / Responsibilities etc) RESPONSIBILITIES PSE Board / CMT REPORTING ARRANGEMENTS FREQUENCY OF REPORTING DMT Director, Heads of Service, Committee Senior Mgrs, PMO - Seminar Project Board Head of Service Programme Mgr Service Mgrs Project Mgrs PMO Corporate Core Managers as reqd PMO HR / Trade Unions Project Team Meeting DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 3 Assessment Task 12a Cross Reference Outcome 3 Assessment Task 13 Project Reporting Arrangements Flash Report xx Project Title: Project Mgr: Reporting Period: What have we achieved this month? RAG Status Y/N Are you on track To achieve timelines TBC Have you planned Benefits TBC Are you on track to achieve benefits TBC £ Tgts One off Act Status Ongoing Act What will done by next monthly flash report? (By whom?) What Help do you need /Communication Planned Top 2 Issues / Risks / Dependencies Actions / Resp/ Date Top 3 Milestones: Milestone 1. CM: 2. NM: 3. FM: Orig Date Plan Date Actual Date RAG Comment Dependency Log Dependency - Why? Owner Date Status DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 1 Assessment Task 4 Project Planning Techniques High Level Project Plan Milestones – Roadmap Q1 2014 Q2 2014 Q3 2013 Q1 2015 Q4 2014 Calendar Jan Projects Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Legend = Time Line Next Milestone Reforecast Milestone Completed Milestone Implementation dates have yet to be agreed DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 3 Assessment Task 10b Key Tasks Plan Calendar ID Key Tasks Jan / Feb / Mar 14 Apr / May / Jun 14 Jul / Aug / Sep 14 Oct / Nov / Dec 14 Jan / Feb / Mar 15 Apr / May / Jun 15 Jul / Aug / Sep 15 Oct / Nov / Dec 15 Jan / Feb / Mar 13 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Evaluation Prep Redesign Final Prep Go Live & Post Support DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 3 Assessment Task 11a Action List Project Stage: Evaluation No. A Description Who Date Comments Status Base Actions 1.1 1.2 1.3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 3 Assessment Task 11b Project Planning- other things to consider... Corporate core departments Why to consider Legal Fiscal i.e. Employment law ICT IT infrastructure/ software/ network/hardware/ IT support implications e.g. staff Procurement Contracts/ tendering HR Organisation/ establishment redesign/ grades/ working patterns/ job evaluations/ trade unions Finance Benefits/ funding/ business cases/ budget baseline information Audit Implications/ communication/ wet signatures/ awareness of new process or system Information security Personal data/ mobiles/ information sharing In all areas there should be communication, direction, advice and guidance. Comfort Break Internal Communication Plan What To Whom How When External Communication Plan What To Whom How When Project Partnerships What E.g. Memorandum of Understanding E.g. Partnership Agreement / formal project documentation With Whom How When Project Change Request Log Change Description CR Ref. No. CR Requestor Request Date Decision Accept / Reject Comments DV5H 35 Unit 1 Outcome 3 Assessment Task 14d Record Keeping and Audit Requirements Shared Drive ‘\\bhqfs02\SQA PM PDA’ on shared drive P Next Stages • Complete learning e-course on project management and associated test • Add our shared drive: Start Right click on ‘My Network Places’ Click ‘Map a network drive’ Select P Drive Name the drive ‘\\bhqfs02\SQA PM PDA’ Contact PMO if you have any problems with this. • 1st coaching session- Arrange with your personal tutor after this session • Next training session Any Questions? PMO Contacts Richard Morrison Ext 8019 Laura Glassford Ext 3074 Joanna Heaney Ext 8424 Mairi-Clare Armstrong Ext 3833 Fraser Currie Ext 8653 Rebecca McDonald Ext 3173