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Project Cycle Management PCM

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An undertaking for the purpose of achieving established objectives, within a ... Objectives that the project should achieve within the project duration. Overall Goal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Project Cycle Management PCM


1
Project Cycle Management (PCM)
  • Participatory Planning

2
What is Project?
  • Objective
  • Activities ? Outputs
  • Duration
  • Budget(Input)
  • Resources (Input)

An undertaking for the purpose of achieving
established objectives, within a given budget and
time period.
3
What is Project Cycle ?
  • Project identification
  • Project formation
  • Appraisal
  • Implementation
  • Monitoring
  • Plan revision
  • Evaluation
  • Feedback

4
Project Cycle Management
PDM
5
Do
See
We are in this stage.
Plan
Do
See
See
Do
Plan
Plan
6
Project Design Matrix(PDM)
7
PDM Vertical Logic
  • Project Purpose
  • Objectives that the project should achieve
    within the project duration
  • Overall Goal
  • Direction that the project should take next
  • Outputs
  • Strategies for achieving the Project Purpose
  • Activities
  • Specific actions taken to produce Outputs
  • Important Assumptions
  • Conditions important for project success, but
    that cannot be controlled by the projects.
    Whether these conditions develop or not is
    uncertain.

8
PDM Horizontal Logic
  • Objectively Verifiable Indicators
  • Standards for measuring project achievement.
  • Means of Verification
  • Data sources from which indicators are derived.
  • Inputs
  • Personnel, materials, equipments, facilities and
    funds required by the project.
  • Preconditions
  • Conditions that must be fulfilled before a
    project gets underway

9
Characteristics of PCM
Participatory Approach
Logicality
Problem-Solving
Transparency
Consistency
10
(No Transcript)
11
Needs of Local People Ownership of Beneficiaries
Transparency of Project Process
12
Development of PCM Method
  • Late 1960s Logical Framework (USAID)
  • ? International Agencies introduce the
    Logframe
  • Early 1980s ZOOP (GTZ)
  • Objectives-Oriented Project Planning
  • ? European countries adapt the ZOPP
  • Early 1990s PCM(FASID)
  • ? JICA begins full-scale introduction of the
    PCM

13
Participants in the Workshop
Moderator
Recipient country implementing agency
Other organization
Recipient country governmental agency
Resident of the community
Personnel of the donor agency
Expert in a related issue
14
PCM Workshop
Analyzing step by step
Consensus
Cards Board
Moderator
Working as a team
Visualizing ideas
Brainstorming
15
8 Rules
  • Write down your own statement on a card.
  • Write only one idea on a card.
  • Make your statement specific.
  • Express your statement in a concise sentence.
  • Stick to the facts and avoid abstractions and
    generalizations.
  • Make it a rule to write cards before beginning
    discussions.
  • Do not remove a card from the board before a
    consensus is obtained.
  • Do not ask who wrote a particular card.

16
7 Steps in PP
Analysis Stage
Stakeholders Analysis
Problems Analysis
Objectives Analysis
We are practicing by this stage.
Project Selection
Planning Stage
Plan of Operation
PDM
Appraisal
17
Working together
18
STEP1 Stakeholders Analysis
Identify the issues, problems, and current
conditions of the target area through analyzing
the area and local residents targeted for
assistance, related groups, related organizations
and agencies. Focus on people and
organization. Tentatively select a target group.
19
STEP2 Problems Analysis
  • Problems Analysis visually represents the
    causes and effects of existing problems in the
    project area, in the form of a Problem Tree. It
    clarifies the relationships among the identified
    problems.

20
STEP3 Objectives Analysis
  • Objective Analysis clarifies the means-ends
    relationship between the desirable situation that
    would be attained one problems have been solved
    and the solution for attaining it. This stage
    also requires an Objective Tree.

21
STEP4 Project Selection
  • Project Selection is a process in which
    specific project strategies are selected from
    among the objectives and means raised in
    Objectives Analysis, based upon selection
    criteria.

22
STEP5 Formation of the PDM
  • The project design Matrix (PDM) is formed
    through elaborating the major project components
    and plans based on the approach selected. The
    format of PDM is similar to that of the Logical
    Framework, and therefore can be commonly used
    worldwide.

23
STEP6 PDM Appraisal
  • The PDM Appraisal is conducted by an aid agency
    to ensure the project plan. It is composed of
    the following stage
  • (1) Examination of the details of the PDM
    elements (2) review of the PDM formation
    process (3) examination from the perspective of
    the five evaluation criteria.

24
STEP7 Plan of Operations
  • The Plan of Operation is prepared by the
    project implementers, based on the PDM and other
    information. It is an effective tool for project
    implementation and management, and provides
    important data for monitoring and evaluation of
    the project.

25
Rules for Writing Problems
  • Write in a Sentence.
  • Make Clear Subject and Object.
  • 2. Avoid No Solution.
  • Avoid Generalization. Be Specific.
  • Dont Write a Cause and Effect in One Card.
  • Be Specific Whose problem.

26
Example Format of Plan of Operation
27
Monitoring and Evaluation
  • The Five Evaluation Criteria
  • Efficiency
  • Effectiveness
  • Impact
  • Relevance
  • Sustainability

28
  • Efficiency
  • The productivity in project implementation. The
    degree to which Inputs have been converted into
    Outputs.
  • Effectiveness
  • The degree to which the Project Purpose
    has been achieved by the project Outputs.
  • Impact
  • Positive and negative changes produced, directly
    or indirectly, as a result of the Implementation
    of the project.
  • Relevance
  • The validity of the Overall Goal and Project
    Purpose at the evaluation stage.
  • Sustainability
  • The durability of the benefits an and
    development effects produced by the project after
    its completion.
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