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Practice Of Project Mgt. PY 674 – Session 7 Project Manger’s Tools and Skills 1 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 6 Review - Week 6 - Chapter 11: Planning The most important responsibilities of a Project Manager are: Planning Integrating (resources, schedules, dollars) and Executing plans! (Plan your work – work your plan) The best project plans identify all work required so that it will be readily identifiable to each project participant. This is a requirement in a successful project because: 1. If the tasks are well understood prior to being performed, much of the work can be preplanned 2. If the task is not understood, then during execution, more knowledge is gained that leads to changes in resource allocations, schedules, and priorities 3. The more uncertain the task (RISK), the greater the amount of information needed and processed to ENSURE project success PMBOK Chapter 5 2 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 6 Review - Week 6 - Chapter 11: Planning There are two proverbs that affect project planning: Failing to plan – is Planning to fail Failing to plan means that failure comes as a complete surprise, rather than preceded by worry and depression! See consequences of not planning on p. 396 of text. There are 4 basic reasons for project planning: 1. To eliminate or (significantly) reduce uncertainty 2. To improve efficiency of the operation 3. To obtain a better understanding of the objectives 4. To provide a basis for monitoring and controlling work PMBOK Chapter 5 3 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 6 Review - Week 6 - Chapter 11: Planning Project “bromides” . . . Document your assumptions and thinking in planning – hindsight is always 20 / 20 ~ (I should have known that . . .ughhh) The Life cycle approach to project planning doesn’t handcuff the PM – a roadmap is always easier than asking for directions Control and validation points are called many things: Design reviews On-off ramps, or Stage Gates PMBOK Chapter 5 4 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 6 Review - Week 6 - Chapter 11: Planning A Project Manager will define !!!!! Goals and objectives Major milestones Requirements Ground rules and assumptions Time, cost, and performance constraints Operating procedures Administrative policy Reporting requirements Risk Management process PMBOK Chapter 5 5 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Review - Week 6 - Chapter 11: Planning NOTE – many times it is not possible to satisfy all project objectives. Management must help prioritize objectives at this point. A PM must know differences between SOW and WBS At a low level of the WBS, the interdependence between activities can become so complex that meaningful networks cannot be constructed. Many companies have been successful in managing programs without the use of a WBS, especially for repetitive programs. Not all technical specialists are good planners Executives must not set unrealistic milestones and then “force” line management to fulfill them. Executives must realize that creating unreasonable deadlines may require the re-establishment of priorities. Changing priorities can push milestones backward. PMBOK Chapter 5 6 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 6 Review - Week 6 - Chapter 11: Planning NOTE – No matter how hard you try, planning is not perfect, and sometimes plans fail! See typical reasons on p. 431 of text book Sometimes projects fail just because the PM “bites off more than they can chew”. The flu can visit you!! Today most projects not completed within time and budget are behavioral rather than quantitative. They include: Poor morale Poor human relations Poor labor productivity No commitment by those involved in the project PMBOK Chapter 4 7 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management There is NO single textbook answer on how to manage risk – one size does not fit all projects or circumstances. Risk management is the act or practice of dealing with risk. It includes : Planning for risk Identifying and analyzing risk issues Developing risk handling strategies (called mitigation), and Monitoring risks to determine how they have changed It is a full time career by its self. http://jobs.efinancialcareers.com/Risk_Management.htm PMBOK Chapter 11 8 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management Risk has two primary components of that event: A probability (likelihood) of occurrence of that event Impact of that event occurring (amount at stake) Here’s real risk - PMBOK Chapter 11 9 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management Hedge funds – what are they trying to risk? Institutions To Ramp Up Hedge Fund Portfolios June 5, 2008 Expect institutional investors to increase their hedge fund allocations by as much as 50% over the next couple of years, according to one finance professor at the University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School. Christopher Geczy, who heads Wharton’s alternative investments certificate program, said recent high-profile hedge fund meltdowns “do not immutably change the longer-term outlook” for the industry, and expects institutions to up their current 10% allocation to hedge funds to between 12.5% to 15%. Patrick Egan, founder of Attalus Capital, which manages a $3 billion fund of hedge funds for institutional investors, added that institutions are increasingly moving into “active management” of alternative investments to achieve the actuarial rate of returns needed to pay for their employee's retirement. However, David Lees, a senior partner of myCIO Wealth Partners, a consulting firm, warned that the risk of losing substantial amounts of capital in the alternatives space has also increased versus other investments. “If you chose well, you can do very well, if you chose wrong, you can do substantially worse than average,” he said. » Source: http://www.finalternatives.com/node/4528 PMBOK Chapter 11 10 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management Why is decision making under certainty the preferred method to define risk and risk outcome? Risks can be viewed as “outcomes” (i.e. states of nature) that can be described within established confidence limits (i.e. probability distributions). E.g. – if the probability of being correct is .95, the probability of being incorrect is = 1 - .95 or .05; E.g. – if the probability of being correct is .99 the probability of being incorrect is = 1 -.99 or .01. PMBOK Chapter 11 11 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management The text gives many examples of table construction to present various “states of nature” (think PERT here) for predicting risk and outcomes. (see pp. 712 & 713) How many states of nature does the PERT calculation contain? Not many projects use these sophisticated tools – but they can be very useful when risk is ambiguous and needs clarity to define and build mitigation plans around. PMBOK Chapter 11 12 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management Remember – we said that a risk management strategy should be established early in your project – and that risk should be continually addressed throughout your project. Well this text book says the same thing. (see p. 718) So as skilled practitioners – what will be your approach to a risk management process? 13 PMBOK Chapter 11 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management There are 3 key steps to the risk management process: 1. Risk planning 2. Risk assessment 3. Risk handling PMBOK Chapter 11 14 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Line of Business: Vendor Name: Business Need: Contract Version: Sample of contract High risk contract; no auto drive to exclusive legal review Drives legal review up to exclusive legal review level New Contract Criterion: Contract Amount CBI Business Value/Profit Customer Information Business Impact Mission Critical2 Operational Impact Regulatory Contract Duration Contract Complexity 1 Line of Business Contact: Date (MM/DD/YY): Contract Category: Contract Type: 2 3 $500k or more in total committed expense over the life of the contract Between $50k and $500k in total $50k or less in total committed committed expense over the life of expense over the life of the the contract contract Profit is $0 or negative over the life Profit is $500k or more over the life Profit is between $0 and $500k of the contract or expense item of the contract over the life of the contract only Sensitive customer information1 is Non-sensitive customer information No customer information is is involved involved involved Contract Failure - There is a Contract Failure - There is a Contract Failure - There is minimal probability for either material probability for either minimal reputation risk, minimal reputation risk, material reputation risk, possible remediation costs and minimal remediation costs and/or material remediation costs and/or liability liability exposure liability exposure exposure Yes No Large number of interfaces to other Few interfaces to other Off the shelf (shrink wrapped) processes/systems processes/systems software with no interfaces Noncompliance - minimal Noncompliance - cease and desist Noncompliance - no regulatory risk regulatory risk and minimal or material financial penalties and no financial penalties financial penalties Greater than 5 years 2 to 5 years Less than 2 years Multiple agreements and/or Moderate complexity in number of Simple/Basic contractual terms and complex contractual terms and agreements and/or contractual conditions conditions terms and conditions Bob Rauscher 09/11/07 Consulting Addendum Select One: Select One Select One Select One Select One Select One Select One Select One Select One Select One 9 Scoring A = Exclusive Legal Department review and negotiation B = Contract Office review and Legal Department signoff Financial Risk Assessment YES GLBA Risk Assessment NO Third Party Risk Assessment YES C = Contract Office review and Legal Department involvement upon request Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 D = Exclusive Contract Office review and negotiation 15 Application of Project Management PY 674 – Session 7 Week 7 - Chapter 17: Risk Management Summary: Besides planning – risk management is perhaps the most essential portion of PM, and it is often ignored or given a minor role. It needs to be prominent in All phases of the project life cycle PMBOK Chapter 11 16 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003 Application of Project Mgt. Mind Break . . .? 17 Copyright © The Conestoga Group 2003