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ILU Project Management Training

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Title: ILU Project Management Training


1
ILU Project Management Training
  • Project Management II
  • Project Execution, Control and Closure

2
Agenda - Day One
  • Introductions
  • Planning Initiation Phases Recap
  • Break
  • Critical Path of a Project
  • Critical Path Exercise
  • Project Execution Process
  • Lunch
  • Project Controlling Process
  • Break
  • Issues Form Exercise
  • Day One Wrap-up

3
Introductions
  • Name
  • Department
  • Number of years at ILICO
  • Number of projects you have managed
  • Average size of project you have managed
  • Course expectations
  • Ice breaker

4
Ground Rules
  • Level Playing Field (titles left at the door)
  • One conversation at a time
  • Respect opinions of others
  • No beating a dead horse
  • Come back from breaks ON TIME
  • Have FUN

5
Course Objectives
  • Refresh concepts learned in PM - I
  • Understand PMI Material...
  • Critical Path
  • Project Execution Phase
  • How To Apply Project Control
  • Risk Response
  • Project Closing Process
  • How To Apply ILICO Forms Processes to PMI
    Concepts
  • Learn How to Manage Project

6
Recap - Course I Initiation Planning
7
Recap - Definitions
  • A Project is A temporary endeavor undertaken to
    create a unique product or service.
  • Project Management is the application of
    knowledge, skills tools and techniques to project
    activities in order to meet or exceed stakeholder
    needs and expectations from a project.
  • This involves balancing competing demands among
  • Scope, time, cost and quality
  • Stakeholders with differing needs and
    expectations
  • Identified requirements (needs) and unidentified
    requirements (expectations)

8
Recap - Project Management Skills
  • Communication skills
  • Facilitation skills
  • Leadership skills
  • Organizational skills
  • Negotiating skills
  • Project Management Technical skills

9
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10
Recap - 5 PMI PM Processes
11
Recap - 9 PMI PM Knowledge Areas
  • Scope Management
  • understanding what is to be accomplished, by who
    and when? Ensure everyone focused on the right
    activity at the right time
  • Risk Management
  • minimizing threats and weakness while optimizing
    opportunities and strengths
  • Quality Management
  • determining the quality policy of the project and
    then determining the practices to ensure project
    quality
  • Human Resource Management
  • determining the roles and responsibilities of the
    resources necessary to support the project as
    well as the skills and timing needs
  • Communications Management
  • determines what will be communicated, Frequency
    of communications and who will receive
    communications

12
Recap - 9 PMI PM Knowledge Areas
  • Contract / Procurement Management
  • determines how suppliers will be selected and the
    contract types that will be administered
  • Time Management
  • determines how long each activities takes to
    complete to ensure timely completion of the
    project
  • Cost Management
  • determines the costs of resources and materials
    to ensure that the project is completed within
    the approved budget
  • Integration Management
  • Each BOK is integrated with each other at
    differing degrees of application depending on
    where and when you are in the life cycle phase

13
Recap - Triple Constraint
  • As project managers, we are always trying to
    manage the constraints of product, schedule, and
    budget

Product
The Triple Constraint
Schedule
Budget
14
Recap - ILICos PM Processes
15
RecapCourse Example
  • Re-Roofing the House

16
Recap - Work Breakdown Structures
  • Work Breakdown Structure (WBS) - A deliverable
    oriented family tree which organizes, defines,
    and graphically displays the total work to be
    accomplished in order to achieve the ultimate
    deliverable of a project. Each descending level
    represents an increasingly detailed definition of
    the project deliverable. (PMBOK)

WBS SCHEMATIC
1.0 Reroof House
1.1 Materials Estimation
1.2 Materials Gathering
1.3 Roof Application
1.1.1 Measure Roof
1.1.2 Calculate Materials
1.2.1 Purchase Materials
1.2.2 Take Delivery
1.3.1 Roof Removal
1.3.2 Roof Application
1.3.1.1 Remove Shingles
1.3.1.2 Remove Nails
1.3.2.1 Apply Shingles
1.3.2.3 Apply Caps
1.3.2.2 Cut Caps
17
Recap - Re-Roofing Project Activity List
  • Activity
  • 1.1.1 Measure Roof
  • 1.1.2 Calculate Materials
  • 1.2.1 Purchase Materials
  • 1.2.2 Take Delivery
  • 1.3.1.1 Remove Shingles
  • 1.3.1.2 Remove Nails
  • 1.3.2.1 Apply Shingles
  • 1.3.2.2 Cut Caps
  • 1.3.2.3 Apply Caps

18
Recap - Project Network Diagram
1.1.1 Measure Roof
1.1.2 Calculate Materials
1.2.1 Purchase Materials
1.2.2 Take Delivery
1.3.1.1 Remove Shingles
1.3.2.1 Apply Shingles
1.3.1.2 Remove Nails
1.3.2.2 Cut Caps
1.3.2.3 Apply Caps
19
Recap - Project Duration Estimates
20
Recap - Project Schedule
21
Recap - GANTT Chart
22
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23
Critical Path
24
Determine Critical Path of Project Plan
  • Critical Path - The series of activities that
    determines the duration of a project. In a
    deterministic model, the critical path is usually
    defined as those activities with float less than
    or equal to a specified value, often zero. It is
    the longest path through the project. (PMBOK)

25
Determining Critical Path - Key Terms
Early Start (ES) - ...the earliest possible
point in time on which the uncompleted portions
of an activity (or project) can start, based on
the network logic and any schedule constraints.
Early start dates can change as the project
progresses and changes are made to the project
plan. (PMBOK) Early Finish (EF) - ...the
earliest possible point in time on which the
uncompleted portions of an activity (or project)
can finish, based on the network logic and any
schedule constraints. Early finish dates can
change as the project progresses and changes are
made to the project plan. (PMBOK)
26
Determining Critical Path - Key Terms
Late Start (LS) - ...the latest possible point
in time that an activity may begin without
delaying a specified milestone (usually the
project finish date). (PMBOK) Late Finish (LF)
- ...the latest possible point in time that an
activity may be completed without delaying a
specified milestone (usually the project finish
date). (PMBOK) Total Float (TF) - The amount
of time that an activity may be delayed from its
early start without delaying the project finish
date. Float is a mathematical calculation, and
can change as the project progresses and changes
are made to the project plan. Also called slack,
total float, and path float. (PMBOK)
27
ES-EF/LS-LF Calculations
  • ES Previous ES Previous duration
  • EF ES task duration - 1
  • LF previous LF - previous task duration
    (working backwards through the NLD)
  • LS LF - task duration 1
  • Total Float (TF) ES - LS
  • Critical Path path where TF 0

28
Roofing Example
29
Class Exercise - Determine Critical Path
  • You have 20 minutes to complete the diagram
  • We will take 10 minutes to discuss your answers

30
Baseline Project plan
  • Baseline Project Plan - The original approved
    plan (for a project, a work package, or an
    activity), plus or minus approved scope changes.
    Usually used with a modifier (e.g., cost
    baseline, schedule baseline, performance
    measurement baseline). (PMBOK)
  • Not etched in stone
  • Living document
  • Understand purpose of what MS project is showing
    you
  • Different types of baseline (schedule, cost)

31
S Curve Example
32
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33
Executing Processes
34
Project Plan Execution - Description
  • The primary process for carrying out the project
    plan. In this process, the project manager and
    the project management team must coordinate and
    direct the various technical and organizational
    interfaces that exist in the project.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Project plan 2. Supporting detail 3.
Organizational policies 4. Corrective action
1. General management skills 2. Product
skills and knowledge 3. Work authorization
system 4. Status review meeting 5. Project
management information system 6. Org.
procedures
1. Work results 2. Change requests
35
Project Plan Execution - Tools Techniques
  • General management skills - such as leadership,
    communicating, and negotiating are essential.
  • Product skills and knowledge - access to an
    appropriate set of skills and knowledge about the
    project product.
  • Work authorization system - a formal procedure
    for sanctioning project work to ensure that work
    is done at the right time and in the proper
    sequence. The primary mechanism is typically a
    written authorization to begin work on a specific
    activity or work package. On many smaller
    projects, verbal authorization will be adequate.

36
Project Plan Execution - Tools Techniques
  • Status review meetings - regularly scheduled
    meetings held to exchange information about the
    project.
  • Project management information system - tools and
    techniques used to gather, integrate, and
    disseminate the outputs of the other project
    management processes. It is used to support all
    aspects of the project from initiating through
    closing and generally includes both manual and
    automated systems.

37
Project Plan Execution - Outputs
  • Work results - the outcomes of the activities
    performed to accomplish the project. Information
    on work results - which deliverables have been
    completed and which have not, to what extent
    quality standards are being met, what costs have
    been incurred or committed, etc - is collected as
    part of the project plan execution and fed into
    the performance reporting process.
  • Change requests - are often identified while the
    work of the project is being done.

38
Scope Verification - Description
  • The process of formalizing acceptance of the
    project scope and work results by the
    stakeholders. It is primarily concerned with
    acceptance of work results while quality control
    is primarily concerned with the correctness of
    the work results.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Work results 2. Product documentation
1. Inspection
1. Formal acceptance
39
Scope Verification - Tools Techniques
  • Inspection - includes activities such as
    measuring, examining, and testing undertaken to
    determine whether results conform to
    requirements. Inspections are variously called
    reviews, product reviews, audits, and
    walk-throughs.

40
Scope Verification - Outputs
  • Formal acceptance - Documentation that the client
    or sponsor has accepted the product of the
    project or phase must be prepared and
    distributed. Such acceptance may be conditional,
    especially at the end of a phase.

41
Delivery Acceptance Form
42
Quality Assurance - Description
  • All the planned and systematic activities
    implemented within the quality system to provide
    confidence that the project will satisfy the
    relevant quality standards.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Quality management plan 2. Results of
quality control measurements 3. Operational
definitions
1. Quality planning tools and techniques 2.
Quality audits
1. Quality improvement
43
Quality Assurance - Tools Techniques
  • Quality planning tools techniques - include
    tools such as benefit/cost analysis,
    benchmarking, flowcharting and design of
    experiments.
  • Quality audits - a structured review of other
    quality management activities. The objective is
    to identify lessons learned that can improve
    performance of this project.

44
Quality Assurance - Outputs
  • Quality Improvement - includes taking action to
    increase the effectiveness and efficiency of the
    project to provide added benefits to the project
    stakeholders.

45
Team Development - Description
  • Includes both enhancing the ability of
    stakeholders to contribute as individuals as well
    as enhancing the ability of the team to function
    as a team. Individual development is the
    foundation necessary to develop the team, and is
    critical to the project.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Project staff 2. Project plan 3. Staffing
management plan 4. Performance reports 5.
External feedback
1. Team-building activities 2. General
management skills 3. Reward recognition
systems 4. Collocation 5. Training
1. Performance improvements 2. Input to
performance appraisals
46
Team Development - Tools Techniques
  • Team-building activities - management and
    individual actions taken specifically and
    primarily to improve team performance. Many
    actions, such as involving non-management level
    team members in the planning process, or
    establishing ground rules for surfacing and
    dealing with conflict, may enhance team
    performance as a secondary effect. Team-building
    activities can vary from a five minute agenda
    item in a regular status review meeting to an
    extended, off-site, professionally facilitated
    experience designed to improve interpersonal
    relationships among key stakeholders.

47
Team Development - Tools Techniques
  • General management skills
  • Reward and recognition systems - formal
    management actions which promote or reinforce
    desired behavior. To be effective, such systems
    must make the link between performance and reward
    clear, explicit, and achievable. Projects must
    often have their own reward and recognition
    systems since the systems of the performing
    organization may not be appropriate. Reward and
    recognition systems much also consider cultural
    differences.

48
Team Development - Tools Techniques
  • Collocation - involves placing all, or almost
    all, of the most active project team members in
    the same physical location to enhance their
    ability to perform as a team.
  • Training - all activities designed to enhance the
    skills, knowledge and capabilities of the project
    team.

49
Team Development - Outputs
  • Performance improvements - the primary output of
    team development.
  • Input to performance appraisals - project staff
    should generally provide input to the performance
    appraisals of any project staff members that they
    interact with in a significant way.

50
Information Distribution - Description
  • Involves making needed information available to
    project stakeholders in a timely manner. It
    includes implementing the communications
    management plan as well as responding to
    unexpected requests for information.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Work results 2. Communications management
plan 3. Project plan
1. Communications skills 2. Information
retrieval systems 3. Information
distribution systems
1. Project records
51
Information Distribution - Tools Techniques
  • Communications skills - used to exchange
    information. The sender is responsible for making
    the information clear, unambiguous, and complete
    so the receiver can receive it correctly and for
    confirming that it is properly understood.
    Includes
  • Written and oral, listening and speaking
  • Internal (within the project) and external (the
    customer, media, public..)
  • Formal (reports, briefings) and informal (memos,
    ad hoc )
  • Vertical (up and down the organization) and
    horizontal (with peers)

52
Information Distribution - Tools Techniques
  • Information retrieval systems - Information can
    be shared by team members through a variety of
    methods including manual filing systems,
    electronic text databases, project management
    software, and systems which allow access to
    technical documentation.
  • Information distribution systems - using a
    variety of methods including project meetings,
    hard copy document distribution, shared access to
    networked electronic databases, fax, electronic
    mail, voice mail and video conferencing.

53
Information Distribution - Outputs
  • Project records - may include correspondence,
    memos, reports and documents describing the
    project. This information should, to the extent
    possible and appropriate, be maintained in an
    organized fashion. Project team members may often
    maintain personal records in a project notebook.

54
Solicitation - Description
  • Involves obtaining information (bids and
    proposals) from prospective sellers on how
    project needs can be met.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Procurement documents 2. Qualified seller
lists
1. Bidders conferences 2. Advertising
1. Proposals
55
Solicitation - Tools Techniques
  • Bidder conferences - are meetings with
    prospective sellers prior to preparation of a
    proposal. They are used to ensure that all
    prospective sellers have a clear, common
    understanding of the procurement (technical
    requirements, contract requirements, etc.).
  • Advertising - Existing lists of potential sellers
    can often be expanded by placing advertisements
    in general circulation publications.

56
Solicitation - Outputs
  • Proposals - are seller-prepared documents that
    describe the sellers ability and willingness to
    provide the requested product.

57
Source Selection - Description
  • Involves the receipt of bids and the application
    of the evaluation criteria to select a provider.
    The process is not straightforward
  • Price may be the primary determinant for an
    off-the-shelf item, but the lowest proposed price
    may not be the lowest cost if the seller proves
    unable to deliver.
  • Proposals are often separated into technical
    (approach) and commercial (price).

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Proposals 2. Evaluation criteria 3.
Organizational policies
1. Contract negotiation 2. Weighting system 3.
Screening system 4. Independent estimates
1. Contract
58
Source Selection - Tools Techniques
  • Contract negotiation - involves clarification and
    mutual agreement on the structure and
    requirements of the contract prior to the signing
    of the contract. To the extent possible, final
    contract language should reflect all agreements
    reached.
  • Weighting system - a method for quantifying
    qualitative data in order to minimize the effect
    of personal prejudice on source selection.
  • Screening system - establishing minimum
    requirements of performance for one or more of
    the evaluation criteria.
  • Independent estimates - the procuring
    organization may prepare its own estimates as a
    check on proposed pricing.

59
Source Selection - Outputs
  • Contract - a contract is a mutually binding
    agreement which obligates the seller to provide
    the specified product and obligates the buyer to
    pay for it. A contract is a legal relationship
    subject to remedy in the courts.
  • Although all project documents are subject to
    some form of review and approval, the legally
    binding nature of a contract usually means that
    it will be subjected to a more extensive approval
    process.

60
Contract Administration - Description
  • The process of ensuring that the sellers
    performance meets contractual requirements. On
    larger projects with multiple product and service
    providers, a key aspect of contract
    administration is managing the interfaces among
    providers.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Contract 2. Work results 3. Change requests 4.
Seller invoices
1. Contract change control system 2.
Performance reporting 3. Payment system
1. Correspondence 2. Contract changes 3. Payment
requests
61
Contract Administration - Tools Techniques
  • Contract change control system - defines the
    process by which the contract may be modified. It
    includes the paperwork, tracking systems, dispute
    resolution procedures and approval levels
    necessary for authorizing changes.
  • Performance reporting - provides management with
    information about how effectively the seller is
    achieving the contractual objectives.
  • Payment system - Usually handled by accounts
    payable.

62
Contract Administration - Outputs
  • Correspondence - Contract terms and conditions
    often require written documentation of certain
    aspects of buyer/seller communications, such as
    warnings of unsatisfactory performance and
    contract changes or clarifications.
  • Contract Changes - changes (approved and
    unapproved) are fed back through the appropriate
    project planning and project procurement
    processes, and the project plan or other relevant
    documentation is updated as appropriate.
  • Payment requests - sent to accounts payable.

63
(No Transcript)
64
Day One Wrap Up
  • Wrap Up
  • /? Chart

65
Agenda - Day Two
  • Change Control Exercise
  • Break
  • Schedule, Cost, Quality Control, Exercise
  • Lunch
  • Risk Response Control
  • Exercise Risk Response
  • ILICO Status Report
  • Exercise Project Status Tracking Meeting Role
    Play
  • Break
  • Closing Process
  • Full Project Life-Cycle Exercise
  • Course Wrap-up

66
Controlling Processes
67
Performance Reporting - Definition
  • Involves collecting and disseminating performance
    information in order to provide stakeholders with
    information about how resources are being used to
    achieve project objectives. This includes Status
    Reporting, Progress Reporting Forecasting.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Project plan 2. Work results 3. Other project
records
1. Performance reviews 2. Variance analysis 3.
Trend analysis 4. Earned value analysis 5.
Information distribution tools and
techniques
1. Performance reports 2. Change requests
68
Performance Reporting - Includes
  • Performance reporting should generally provide
    information on scope, schedule, cost and quality.
  • Many projects also require information on risk
    and procurement. Reports may be prepared
    comprehensively or on an exception basis.

69
Performance Reporting - Tools Techniques
  • Performance reviews - meetings held to assess
    project status or progress.
  • Variance analysis - comparing actual project
    results to planned or expected results. Cost and
    schedule variances are the most frequently
    analyzed, but variances from plan in the areas of
    scope, quality and risk are often of equal or
    greater importance.
  • Trend analysis - examining project results over
    time to determine if performance is improving or
    deteriorating.

70
Performance Reporting - Tools Techniques
  • Earned value analysis - The most commonly used
    method of performance measurement. It integrates
    scope, cost and schedule measures to help the
    project management team assess project
    performance.
  • Information distribution tools techniques

71
Performance Reporting - Outputs
  • Performance reports - organize and summarize the
    information gathered and present the result of
    any analysis. Reports should provide the kinds of
    information and the level of detail required by
    various stakeholders as documented in the
    communications management plan.
  • Change requests - analysis of project performance
    often generates a request for a change to some
    aspect of the project. These change request are
    handled as described in the various change
    control processes.

72
ILICO Project Status Report
73
Class Role Play - Status Meeting
74
Issues Management - Definition
  • Involves recording, organizing and prioritizing
    project issues that affect cost or schedule and
    maintaining a current status on each issue
    through its resolution.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Project plan 2. Project Issues 3. Decision
Approval authority structure
1. Issue logging system 2. Status meetings 3.
Issue routing approval matrix 4. Issue
resolution procedures
1. Up-to-date issue log 2. Resolved issues
75
Issues Management - Tools Techniques
  • Issues Logging System - Can be an MS Word table
    or a powerful database. The key is to assign
    ownership and follow-up on aging and links to
    tasks.
  • Status Meetings - Issues and issue status should
    be a part of routine status discussions.
  • Issue Approval Routing Matrix - The team should
    be clearly aware of which stakeholders and
    project team members need to provide input and
    approval.
  • Issue Resolution Procedures - These procedures
    should clearly document how the logging system,
    status meetings and approval process work
    together.

76
Issues Management - Outputs
  • Up-to-date Issue Log - issues can lead to scope
    changes or risk responses. An up-to-date issues
    log provides for effective communication,
    documentation and progress management.
  • Resolved Issues - timeliness in resolving project
    issues will keep the project on track and help
    contain time delays and cost increases.

77
Issues Management - ILICO Issues Form
78
Class Exercise - Issues Management
  • You have 15 minutes to use the ILICO issue
    template to document two issues related to your
    project
  • We will take 10 minutes to discuss your answers

79
Overall Change Control - Definition
  • Concerned with influencing the factors which
    create changes to ensure that changes are
    beneficial determining that a change has
    occurred and managing the actual changes as they
    occur

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Project plan 2. Performance reports 3. Change
requests
1. Change control system 2. Configuration
mgmt 3. Performance measurement 4. Additional
planning 5. Project management information
system
1. Project plan updates 2. Corrective action 3.
Lessons learned
80
Overall Change Control - Requires
  • Maintaining the integrity of the performance
    measurement baselines
  • All approved changes should be reflected in the
    project plan, but only project scope changes will
    affect the performance measurement baselines.
  • Ensuring that changes are reflected in the
    definition of the project scope.
  • Coordinating changes across knowledge areas.
  • For example, a proposed schedule change will
    often affect cost, risk, quality and staffing.

81
Overall Change Control - Tools Techniques
  • Configuration management - is any documented
    procedure used to apply technical and
    administrative direction and surveillance to
  • Identify and document the functional and physical
    characteristics of an item or system.
  • Control any changes to such characteristics
  • Record and report the change and its
    implementation status
  • Audit the items and system to verify conformation
    to requirements
  • A subset of the change control system used to
    ensure that the description of the project
    product is correct complete.

82
Overall Change Control - Tools Techniques
  • Performance measurement - such as earned value
    help to assess whether variances from the plan
    require corrective action.
  • Additional planning - Projects seldom run exactly
    according to plan. Prospective changes may
    require new or revised cost estimates, modified
    activity sequences, analysis of risk response
    alternatives, or other adjustments to the project
    plan.
  • Project management information system

83
Overall Change Control - Outputs
  • Project plan updates - any modification to the
    contents of the project plan or the supporting
    detail. Appropriate stakeholders must be notified
    as needed.
  • Corrective action - anything done to bring
    expected future project performance into line
    with the project plan.
  • Lessons learned - the causes of variances, the
    reasoning behind the corrective action chosen,
    and other types of lessons learned should be
    documented so that they become part of the
    historical database for both this project and
    other projects of the performing organization.

84
Scope Change Control - Definition
  • Concerned with
  • Influencing the factors that create scope changes
    to ensure changes are beneficial
  • Determining that a scope change has occurred
  • Managing the actual changes when and if they occur

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Work breakdown structure 2. Performance
reports 3. Change requests 4. Scope management
plan
1. Scope change control system 2.
Performance measurement 3. Additional planning
1. Scope changes 2. Corrective action 3. Lessons
learned
85
Scope Change Control - Tools Techniques
  • Scope change control system - defines the
    procedures by which the project scope may be
    changed. It includes the paperwork, tracking
    systems, and approval levels necessary for
    authorizing changes.
  • Performance measurement - help to assess the
    magnitude of any variations which do occur. An
    important part of scope change control is to
    determine what is causing the variance and to
    decide if the variance requires corrective
    action.
  • Additional planning - scope changes may require
    modifications to the WBS or analysis of
    alternatives.

86
Scope Change Control - Outputs
  • Scope changes - any modification to the agreed
    upon project scope as defined by the approved
    WBS. Scope changes often require adjustments to
    cost, time, quality or other project objectives.
  • Corrective action - anything done to bring
    expected future project performance into line
    with the project plan.
  • Lessons learned - The causes of variances, the
    reasoning behind the corrective action chosen,
    and other types of lessons learned from scope
    change control should be documented.

87
ILICO Scope Change Form
88
Class Exercise - Scope Change
  • Each team will have 15 minutes to document two
    scope changes as it relates to there project
    using the ILICO scope change template
  • We will take 5 minutes to discuss your answers

89
Schedule Control - Definition
  • Concerned with
  • Influencing the factors that create schedule
    changes to ensure they are beneficial
  • Determining that the schedule has changed
  • Managing the actual changes when and as they occur

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Project schedule 2. Performance reports 3.
Change requests 4. Schedule management plan
1. Schedule change control system 2.
Performance measurement 3. Additional
planning 4. Project management software
1. Schedule updates 2. Corrective action 3.
Lessons learned
90
Schedule Control - Tools Techniques
  • Schedule change control system - defines the
    procedures by which the project schedule may be
    changed. It includes the paperwork, tracking
    systems, and approval levels necessary for
    authorizing changes.
  • Performance measurement - help to assess the
    magnitude of any variations which do occur. An
    important part of schedule change control is to
    decide if the schedule variation requires
    corrective action.
  • Additional planning - scope changes may require
    new or revised activity duration estimates,
    modified activity sequences, or analysis of
    alternative schedules.

91
Schedule Control - Tools Techniques
  • Project management software - MS Project
  • Crashing - Taking action to decrease the total
    project duration after analyzing a number of
    alternatives to determine how to get the maximum
    duration compression for the least cost (PMBOK).
  • Fast-Tracking - Compressing the project schedule
    by overlapping activities that would normally be
    done in sequence, such as design and
    construction. (PMBOK)

92
Schedule Control - Outputs
  • Schedule updates - any modification to the
    schedule information which is used to manage the
    project. Appropriate stakeholders must be
    notified as needed.
  • Corrective action - anything done to bring
    expected future schedule performance into line
    with the plan.
  • Lessons learned - The causes of variances, the
    reasoning behind the corrective action chosen,
    and other types of lessons learned from schedule
    control should be documented.

93
Re-roofing Schedule Change Example
94
Class Exercise - Schedule Change
  • Each team will have 15 minutes to evaluate two
    task duration changes. Recalculate the
    ES-EF/LF-SL and total float parameters
  • We will take 10 minutes to discuss your answers

95
Cost Control - Definition
  • Concerned with
  • Influencing the factors that create changes to
    ensure changes are beneficial
  • Determining that the cost baseline has changed
  • Managing the actual changes when and if they occur

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Cost baseline 2. Performance reports 3. Change
requests 4. Cost management plan
1. Cost change control system 2. Performance
measurement 3. Additional planning 4.
Computerized tools
1. Revised cost estimates 2. Budget
updates 3. Corrective action 4. Estimate at
completion 5. Lessons learned
96
Cost Control - Definition
  • Includes
  • Monitoring cost performance to detect variances
    from plan
  • Ensuring that all appropriate changes are
    recorded accurately in the cost baseline
  • Preventing incorrect, inappropriate, or
    unauthorized changes from being included in the
    cost baseline
  • Informing appropriate stakeholders of authorized
    changes
  • Cost control searches out the whys of both
    positive and negative variances.

97
Cost Control - Tools Techniques
  • Cost change control system
  • Defines the procedures by which the cost baseline
    may be changed
  • Includes the paperwork, tracking systems, and
    approval levels necessary for authorizing
    changes.
  • Performance measurement
  • Helps to assess the magnitude of any variations
  • Determine root cause and to decide if corrective
    action is required
  • Additional planning
  • Scope changes may require revised cost estimates
    or analysis of alternatives.
  • Computerized tools
  • PM software
  • Spreadsheets

98
Cost Control - Outputs
  • Revised cost estimates - modifications to the
    cost information used to manage the project.
    Appropriate stakeholders must be notified as
    needed.
  • Budget updates - changes to an approved cost
    baseline. Generally revised only in response to
    scope changes.
  • Corrective action - anything done to bring
    expected future project performance into line
    with the project plan.
  • Estimate at completion - forecast of total
    project costs.
  • Lessons learned - The causes of variances, the
    reasoning behind the corrective action chosen,
    and other types of lessons learned from cost
    control should be documented.

99
ILICo Cost Management Worksheet
  • The ILICo Cost Management Worksheet is used for
    larger projects that have their own cost center
  • For smaller projects the Project Manager must
    manage and report on costs, but may have to pull
    the information from specific cost center reports

100
Re-roofing Cost Control Example
101
Project Quality Control
102
Project Quality Recap
  • Quality Planning - Identifying which quality
    standards are relevant to the project, and
    determining how to satisfy them.
  • Quality Assurance - The process of evaluating
    overall project performance on a regular basis to
    provide confidence that the project will satisfy
    the relevant standards.
  • Quality Control -The process of monitoring
    specific project results to determine if they
    comply with relevant quality standards and
    identifying ways to eliminate causes of
    unsatisfactory performance.

103
ILICo Project Quality
  • ILICo does not have universal project quality
    standards or advanced tools and templates
  • We have successfully used test plans for software
    projects as the basis for quality control
  • Successful project teams will identify relevant
    standards and test for quality in the
    deliverables of the project and experience only
    small amounts of re-work resulting from quality
    problems

104
Quality Control - Definition
  • Monitoring specific project results to determine
    if they comply with relevant quality standards
    and identifying ways to eliminate causes of
    unsatisfactory results.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Work results 2. Quality management plan 3.
Operational definitions 4. Checklists
1. Inspection 2. Control charts 3. Pareto
diagrams 4. Statistical sampling 5.
Flowcharting 6. Trend analysis
1. Quality improvement 2. Acceptance decisions 3.
Rework 4. Completed checklists 5. Process
adjustments
105
Quality Control - Definition
  • The project management team should have a working
    knowledge of statistical quality control,
    especially sampling and probability, to help them
    evaluate quality control outputs. Among other
    subjects, they should know the differences
    between
  • Prevention (keeping errors out of the process)
    and inspection (keeping errors out of the hands
    of the customer)
  • Attribute sampling (the result conforms or it
    does not) and variables sampling (the result is
    rated on a continuous scale that measures degree
    of conformity)
  • Special causes (unusual events) and random causes
    (normal process variation)
  • Tolerances (the result is acceptable if it falls
    within the range specified by the tolerance) and
    control limits (the process is in control if the
    result falls within the control limits)

106
Quality Control - Tools Techniques
  • Inspections - activities such as measuring,
    examining, and testing undertaken to determine
    whether results conform to requirements.
  • Control charts - a graphic display of the
    results, over time, of a process. They are used
    to determine if the process is in control.
  • Pareto diagrams - a histogram, ordered by
    frequency of occurrence, that shows how many
    results were generated by type or category of
    identified cause.

107
Quality Control - Tools Techniques
  • Statistical sampling - involves choosing part of
    a population of interest for inspection.
    Appropriate sampling can often reduce the cost of
    quality control.
  • Flowcharting - Used in quality control to help
    analyze how problems occur.
  • Trend analysis - using mathematical techniques to
    forecast future outcomes based on historical
    results. Trend analysis is often used to monitor
  • Technical performance - how many errors or
    defects have been identified, how many remain
    uncorrected
  • Cost and schedule performance - how many
    activities per period were completed with
    significant variances

108
Quality Control - Outputs
  • Quality improvement - action to increase the
    effectiveness and efficiency of the project to
    provide added benefit to the project
    stakeholders.
  • Acceptance decisions - either accepted or
    rejected
  • Rework - action taken to bring a defective or
    non-conforming item into compliance with
    requirements or specifications. Rework,
    especially unanticipated rework, is a frequent
    cause of project overruns.
  • Completed checklists - part of the projects
    records
  • Process adjustments - involve immediate
    corrective or preventative action as a result of
    quality control.

109
Risk Response Control - Definition
  • Involves executing the risk management plan in
    order to respond to risk events over the course
    of the project. When changes occur, the basic
    cycle of identify, quantify, and respond is
    repeated.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Risk management plan 2. Actual risk
events 3. Additional risk identification
1. Workarounds 2. Additional risk response
development
1. Corrective action 2. Updates to risk
management plan
110
Risk Response Control - Tools Techniques
  • Workarounds - unplanned responses to negative
    risk events. Workarounds are unplanned only in
    the sense that the response was not defined in
    advance of the risk occurring.
  • Additional risk response development - If the
    risk event was not anticipated, or the effect is
    greater than expected, the planned response may
    not be adequate, and it will be necessary to
    repeat the response development process and
    perhaps the risk quantification process as well.

111
Risk Response Control - Outputs
  • Corrective action - consists primarily of
    performing the planned risk response.
  • Updates to the risk management plan - as
    anticipated risk events occur or fail to occur,
    and as actual risk event effects are evaluated,
    estimates of probabilities and value, as well as
    other aspects of the risk management plan should
    be updated.

112
Re-roofing Risk Response Example
113
Class Exercise - Risk Response
  • You have 20 minutes to evaluate a series of risks
    associated to your project
  • Complete the risk-response matrix
  • We will take 10 minutes to discuss your answers

114
Status Report Form
115
Class Exercise - Project Status Report
  • You have 60 minutes to write a status report for
    your project including the issues, scope change,
    and risk-response matrices
  • Each team should also conduct a project status
    tracking meeting according to ILICo standard
    agenda

116
Closing Processes
117
Administrative Closure - Definition
  • Consists of verifying and documenting project
    results to formalize acceptance of the product of
    the project by the sponsor, client, or customer.
    It includes collection of project records,
    ensuring that they reflect final specifications.

Inputs
Tools Techniques
Outputs
1. Performance measurement
documentation 2. Documentation of the product
of the project 3. Other project records
1. Performance reporting tools and
techniques 2. Work release plan 3. Interviews
with Project Stakeholders
1. Project archives 2. Formal acceptance 3.
Lessons learned
118
Administrative Closure - Tools Techniques
  • Uses Performance reporting tools techniques
  • Performance reviews
  • Variance analysis
  • Trend analysis
  • Earned value analysis
  • Work release plan
  • Exit interviews with Project Stakeholders

119
Administrative Closure - Outputs
  • Project archives - a complete set of indexed
    project records should be prepared for archiving
    by the appropriate parties.
  • Formal acceptance - Documentation that the client
    or sponsor has accepted the product of the
    project (or phase) should be prepared and
    distributed.
  • Lessons learned - the causes of variances, the
    reasoning behind the corrective action chosen,
    and other types of lessons learned should be
    documented so that they become part of the
    historical database for both this project and
    other projects of the performing organization.

120
Class Exercise - Full Project Life Cycle
  • Each team has 90 minutes to plan a dinner party
    using the package provided
  • We will take 30 minutes for feedback from each
    team and wrap-up the course

121
Day Two Course Wrap Up
  • Wrap Up
  • /? Chart
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