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Work Breakdown Structure

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Suppose we are going to make an Italian ... However, we do know what the near future work is. ... Definite beginning and ending. Activity has a deliverable ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Work Breakdown Structure


1
Work Breakdown Structure
  • What do we need to do?

2
WBS An Exercise
  • Suppose we are going to make an Italian dinner.
    Answer the questions
  • What do you want on the table?
  • What do we have to do to fix (each item)?
  • That is a Work Breakdown Structure. Now, let's
    talk about the details.

3
Italian Dinner What's on the Table?
4
Italian DinnerWhat do we have to do to fix?
5
Work Breakdown Structure
  • What is it An approach to answering the question
    of what do we have to do.
  • Top-down start by listing the deliverables.
    Then expand the activities needed for each one.
  • Bottom-up list activities that you know are
    needed. Then group them, and name the product of
    the activities (the deliverable)

6
Approaches
  • Sticky notes (Easiest approach) use sticky notes
    and a large board. Let's you rearrange easily.
  • Organization Chart (Powerpoint, Word, Visio)
  • Outline format (Word, Excel)

7
Two Approaches to Completeness
  • "Classic" approach
  • try to ensure that all the work of the project is
    shown in the WBS.
  • I.e., all the deliverables, and all the
    activities, should be shown.
  • Use experts, stakeholder meetings, and other
    methods to make sure that everything is explicit.
  • Agile/Extreme methods
  • Assume that we don't really know what all the
    work is.
  • However, we do know what the near future work is.
  • Do a "rolling wave" type WBS, filling in known
    deliverables and activities, and then adding more
    details later.
  • Make sure you, your project team, and the
    stakeholders agree as to which approach you are
    taking.

8
How Much Detail is Enough?
  • Rule of Thumb 1 person, 2 weeks "chunks"
  • It depends. For rough cut with experienced
    staff, you can use "bigger" chunks. For better
    estimation and inexperienced staff, use "smaller"
    chunks.
  • Rule of thumb Do you know what to do? If yes,
    then you have enough detail. If not, you need to
    do more breakdown.

9
Well-Defined Activities
  • Status/Completion measurable
  • Definite beginning and ending
  • Activity has a deliverable
  • Time to complete and cost easily estimated from
    prior or similar experiences.
  • Activity duration is within acceptable limits
  • Work assignments are independent
  • (from Effective Project Management, 2nd Edition,
    by Robert K. Wysocki, Robert Beck Jr., and David
    B. Crane)

10
Some Cautions
  • Order is NOT important in a WBS (that comes
    later, in a network logic diagram)
  • Don't forget Project Management, Communications,
    and other parts of the project that are often
    left out. Planning, meetings, etc. take time and
    resources!
  • Try to keep to the same "level" of detail in
    activities.
  • Although the examples don't show this, you can
    (and should, often) use subdeliverables and
    subactivities to break down the large chunks.
  • Your WBS should make sense to you and your
    project team.

11
WBS Deliverables and Activities
12
WBS Nouns and Verbs
13
WBS Outline Format
  • Deliverable
  • Activity
  • Activity
  • Deliverable
  • Activity
  • Activity
  • Activity
  • Deliverable
  • Activity
  • Activity

14
WBS An Exercise
  • As individuals, for 10 minutes
  • Take your project and list the deliverables.
  • List the activities for each one.
  • As a group, for 20 minutes
  • Construct a combined WBS using sticky notes for
    your project.
  • As a group, for 5 minutes
  • Collect the "lessons learned" in constructing the
    WBS
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