MB0033 Project Management - Done
MB0033 Project Management - Done
4. Explain in detail the project management review process. What are the
various post review activities ?
The Project Management Review Process includes the following steps:
a. Identification of projects that will participate in the Reviews
b. Development and adherence to a quarterly reporting schedule
c. Compilation of standard project management data into a presentation data
d. Collection of detailed project files that support the information reported during
the project
Management Reviews and may be requested for inspection during a formal audit
e. Participation in the Review meetings with any required followup activities
Applicable Projects
Any corporate or major information system at any facility is a candidate for the
Project
Management Review Process. A meeting will be scheduled to introduce and
explain the Project Management Review Process and reporting tools. As
candidate projects are added to the Review portfolio, they will be incorporated
into the next review cycle schedule.
The program and project managers of the information systems that are included
in the Review portfolio are expected to comply with the process described in this
guide. The program and project managers of information systems that are not
being reviewed through the Project Management Review Process should also
consider using this guide as mandates, that all information technology resources
undergo a management, control, and review process. Several of the current and
future corporate and major information systems initiatives have been identified in
the Departmental information Architecture Program guidance series and in the
Corporate Systems Information Architecture (CSIA) document. Infrastructure
projects may be considered candidates for the Review process. Modernization
plans are also sources for identifying corporate and major systems that should be
included in the Review portfolio or whosesystem owners should implement and
follow this process.
Reporting Schedule: The Project Senior Management Reviews are scheduled
every
three months in conjunction with the fiscal year. A table may be prepared to
contain the columns
“As of Date” column indicates the last day in which information should be
included for each
reporting period, the “Briefing Due Date” column provides the date that an
electronic version of the briefing is due.
Project Management Data
Legislative and regulatory mandates ensure that technology initiatives are
implemented at
acceptable costs within reasonable and expected time frames. The team ensures
that
investments in information technology are fully justified and aligned with agency
missions and business needs. Agency CIOs have the responsibility to ensure
coordination
and tracking of investments.
Throughout the project lifecycle it is important to apply standard project
management best
practices, including tracking and reporting, to all projects, regardless of size. For
smaller projects, stages may be combined and deliverables reduced in scope as
appropriate. For larger or more complex projects, additions project planning,
tracking, and reporting activity may be appropriate.For all projects identified to
participate in project Management Reviews the standard set of project
management reporting requirements fits into the following five categories:
i) General Project Overview
ii) Project Status
iii) Product Status
iv) Issues and Risks
v) Project Unique Information
A substantial amount of project management information that is useful
throughout the information system’s lifecycle should be gathered in a central
project file maintained by the project manager.All work products developed
during the project lifecycle
should be included in the project file.The project manager should verify that all
pertinent project information and documentation are placed in the project file on a
timely basis. In addition to being useful in responding to routine and adhoc
requests for information, a project file is instrumental in case of internal or
external audits.Information about projects in the Review portfolio will be made
available for addition to a corporate and major information system repository.
This repository serves as a database or data warehouse for storing and
accessing information. In addition to the Project Management Review briefing
slides, the repository is being used to store other information needed for
reporting. The following list includes some of the documents that should be
provided for the projects participating
in the Review Process:
i) Set of review charts
ii) Supporting documentation (if any)
iii) Handouts (if any)
iv) Project Plan
v) Work Breakdown Structure
vi) Review meeting notes
Access to the repository is restricted to members of the staff responsible for the
Reviews,
responding to Congressional inquiries, and preparing federally mandated reports,
and to the
program and project managers.
Review Briefings
There are two formats for the Review briefings: First Time and Ongoing. The
First Time Review is the initial briefing that occurs when a project is first added to
the Review portfolio. All subsequent reviews use the Ongoing Review briefing
format. The primary difference between the two formats is the General Overview
of the project that is presented during the First Time Review (FTR). This
information is omitted from the Ongoing Review briefings unless it has changed
since the previous review. It is expected that some of the charts in the First Time
Review will need to be included in the first Ongoing Review of the Fiscal year
since annual objectives and funding may change at the start of the fiscal year.
The briefing content is designed to address all of the pertinent information about
the project at a level appropriate for management and senior management e.g.,
the CIO.
Preparation and electronic submission of each briefing to the CIO is required on
a quarterly basis.A facetoface briefing may not be required each quarter. The
CIO will notify the system
owner/program/project manager to schedule the facetoface briefings that are
required for each reporting period.
Following are some general guidelines for preparing the briefings:
The briefing can be given by the project manager. Other project stakeholders or
key personnel may be involved in the presentation. The briefings should focus on
the current status and issues associated with the project. Two hours are
allocated for each briefing. Participants may attend the meeting in person.
Program and project managers are expected to bring their senior management to
the quarterly briefings. Senior contractor management attendance is considered
to be a good indicator of their interest in assuring their staffs are delivering good
products. A detailed WBS should be provided with the presentation charts.
Termination from the Review Process
By mutual agreement between the CIO and the Program Manager, once a
project has been
implemented (i.e., the system is in operation), the project may discontinue the
Review briefings.Once the Project Management Review has been conducted,
follow up with program/project managers on any issues or concerns requiring
attention, the status of open items from the review,and CIO reporting actions,
e.g., reports to the CIO Council. The CIO may also recommend quality
assurance analysis be conducted.
.1 Issues or Concerns Requiring Attention
The project manager is responsible for raising issues or concerns that require
assistance or
guidance to the attention of the CIO. These items should be communicated
whenever they
become known, and not held to the next Project Management Review. The CIO
will assign
appropriate OCIO staff available to help resolve open items. The program /
project manager
should communicate the status of these items in each quarterly reviews until the
items are
resolved / closed.
.2 Status of Open Items from Review
The program/project manager is responsible for tracking the open items from the
review and
communicating the status in each quarterly review until the items are closed. The
supporting the scheduling of reviews will coordinate with the program/project
manager after the quarterly reviews to help ensure that new items have been
captured for tracking and action by the program/project manager.
.3. CIO Reports
The staff supporting the CIO Quarterly Reviews will prepare a summary report
after each Project Management Review. The summary report will include the
following information:
i) Summary Status
ii) Open Issues/Items
iii) Status Performance Objectives/Measures
iv) Status of Schedule/Cost
The summary report will be provided to the program/project manager to gain
concurrence on the content. The summary report will be used by the CIO when
reporting status to the CIO Council.
1 PROJECT SUMMARY
Project Overview – Consider a firm XYZ
as a Stock Broker/ Dealer firm. Any support software will
have applications supporting the following components:
· first, a Brokerage Account Opening application on XYZ’s Web site that will allow
any internet user to open a brokerage account with XYZ.
· Second, an account opening and maintenance application, which is primarily for
XYZ’s
representatives to open accounts for the applications received in paper format.
This is an intranet application. The application will provide features such as
account history viewing and account balance, status, and activity information.
This will allow XYZ to effectively evolve to a client account servicing application
besides being an accountopening engine. This is an enhancement of an existing
application.
14.2.2 Project Scope
· To provide an effective, efficient means of amount maintenance activities
· To allow representatives to provide information
· To provide a complete picture to the client representatives for account status,
valuation, order
status, and trade activity
· To increase the intelligence of the update process
· To Provide an interface that can display required amount history
14.2.3 Value addition to the customer
· This project will allow XYZ to effectively evolve a client account servicing
application besides being an account giving engine.
a. Objectives
Strengthen relationship with XYZ by delivered high quality software on time
Become preferred vendor by developing expensive on XYZ product and systems
b. Commitment made to the customer
c. Assumptions:
Assumptions made while planning
· Intelligent update to business partners will be incorporated in only the
maintenance part of the application and not in the Account opening engine.
· Qualified people will approve Rational Unified Process methodology for
implementing this project Changes in functional and technical requirements
during the life cycle of the project may have an impace on the schedule. Any
impact on cost or schedule due to these changes will be intimated to XYZ.
· XYZ reviewers will take seven days to approve a milestone document. If no
comments are received within this time period, it will be considered as approved.
Project Planning
Change request tracking
· Changes requested by customer will be logged in change request. Xls and
analyzed for impacton the project . A change request form will be submitted to
customer for approval. Change request that are approved will be attached to the
project contract as agenda.
· Major change usually has an effort/deliveryontime impact on the project. The
customer needs to formally approve these
· Because this is a short duration project, if any one or a group of changes
request takes more than 2% of the total estimated effort for the project,
reestimation
of the project schedule and effort will be done.
c. Requirement Trace Ability – Requisite tool will be used
a. Estimated build effort – Estimate the effort required in man days for each
program or function of the project. This will help in estimating the total build effort.
Project
b. Phase Wise effort estimation – Estimate the total effort wrt each activity and
effort for each phase of a project expressed as percentage of man days.
c. Schedule – Prepare a list of items as deliverable to the customer and indicate
the date ofcompletion or delivery of the item to the customer. This is specified in
the form of a tableindicating various milestone of commitment to the customer.
People – Make a list of the people required for each role in the project along with
number of members required for each role. The list should consist of skilled and
unskilled people depending upon the role and experience of the individual. Also
prepare the requirement plan of people as to when and how many of each type
would be required on the project.
14.2.6 Hardware, Software and Tools – Indicate the hardware and software
resources required in the project at every stage. Plan for procurement of
hardware and software depending upon the need at various stage of the project.
Prepare a date wise plan of procurement. Tool List has to be prepared phase
wise and activity wise. Specify the tools to be developed on the project along with
the house tools to be developed in project which can be in the form of
14.2.9 Reviews
Prepare a table of important review points. The table should contain the review
item and the type of review required for each of the review item. Type of review
could be oneperson review, group review
etc.
14.2.10 Risk Management Plan
Prepare a table of risk management plan to indicate the risk type, probability of
each risk, impact of the risk on the project, risk exposure and a risk mitigation
plan for each risk.
14.2.11 Project Tracking
Prepare a measurement plan for tracking the project. The plan must indicate the
appropriate metric to be used, the unit of measurement and the tool to be used.
Also prepare the procedure for task tracking. Similarly prepare a table for
tracking various issues of the project like logging details, review by, review time,
floats etc. Obtain customer feedback on the various items of the project.
Determine the actions for each quality activity. Plan for a review by a senior
management and have a planned frequency of reviews. Verify the status report
about each activity of the project. Prepare a list of
tolerances for the defects observed in items and monitor such items. Prepare
Reports to be given to the Customer which may indicate ·
Milestones reports and weekly status reports
· Issue requiring clarification
· Escalation, if any
Prepare Report to be given to the Business Manager which should contain ·
Customer feedback
· Milestones and weekly status reports
· Issues requiring clarification / attention
· Escalation, if any
· Number of requirement changes and estimated effort for them
· Major changes in plan
Prepare the project organization chart as applicable to the project under
consideration. Include the project team members list along with their
responsibility, starting date and completion date of the activity. A detailed table of
roles and responsibilities for each m
4.2.12 Closure report
At the end prepare closure report table. Indicate the necessary project
phase/entity along with project code and corresponding status.
SET 2
Risk Analysis
The first step in risk analysis is to make each risk item more specific. Risks such
as, “Lack of
Management buyin,” and “people might leave,” are a little ambiguous. In these
cases the group might decide to split the risk into smaller specific risks, such as,
“manager Jane decides that the project is not beneficial,” “Database expert might
leave,” and “Webmaster might get pulled off the project.”
The next step is to set priorities and determine where to focus risk mitigation
efforts. Some of the identified risks are unlikely to occur, and others might not be
serious enough to worry about. During the analysis, discuss with the team
members, each risk item to understand how devastating it would be if it did
occur, and how likely it is to occur. For example, if you had a risk of a key person
leaving, you might decide that it would have a large impact on the project, but
that it is not very likely. In the process below, we have the group agree on how
likely it thinks each risk item is to occur, using a simple scale from 1 to 10 (where
1 is very unlikely and 10 is very likely). The group then rates how serious the
impact would be if the risk did occur, using a simple scale from 1 to 10 (where 1
is little impact and 10 is very large). To use this numbering scheme, first pick out
the items that rate 1 and 10, respectively. Then rate the other items relative to
these boundaries. To determine the priority of each risk item, calculate the
product of the two values, likelihood and impact. This priority scheme helps push
the big risks to the top of the list, and the small risks to the bottom. It is a usual
practice to analyze risk either by sensitivity analysis or by probabilistic analysis.In
sensitivity analysis a study is done to analyse the changes in the variable values
because of a change in one or more of the decision criteria. In the probability
analysis, the frequency of a particular event occurring is determined, based on
which it average weighted average value is calculated.
Each outcome of an event resulting in a risk situation in a risk analysis process is
expressed as a probability. Risk analysis can be performed by calculating the
expected value of each alternativeand selecting the best alternative.
Ex : Now that the group has assigned a priority to each risk, it is ready to select
the items to
mange. Some projects select a subset to take action upon, while others choose
to work on all ofProject the items. To get started, you might select the top 3 risks,
or the top 20%, based on the priority calculation.
In a team the maxim that all members will do well to remember is “Learn to
appreciate the problems of others, and some others would appreciate yours”. It is
therefore important that in a business environment, particularly in Project
Management, efforts to evolve solutions jointly has great benefits, both for the
teams as well as the organisation. The top management has the responsibility of
encouraging such a culture to develop team work to healthy interpersonal
behaviour.
Interpersonal behaviour calls for:
· Projection of a pleasant, but firm personality
· Clarity of expression and communication
· Patience in listening and reacting with empathy
· Documentation and correct recording
· Offer to help
· Call for help whenever necessary
· Seeking information before attempting decisions
· Not waiting for things to go wrong
· Motivation of others through efficiency and meticulousness, rather than urging
and exhibiting dependency
· Putting team goals ahead of individual targets.
The project manager should make it a habit of expressing appreciation openly for
any good work done. Cross Functional Teams have become a necessity and the
synergy they generate would be lost if interpersonal behaviour is not of high
standard. As members are from different functions, understanding the
requirements or compulsions of others is difficult. This fact should be impressed
upon all the members and requesting them to cooperate is vital.
5.8 Traits of successful teams
Work Teams in organizations empower employees to take maximum
responsibility to make decisions, which were once thought to be the prerogative
of managers. Decision of the team represents the collective wisdom of its
members and as they all are bound by them, they try to make it better. The point
of interest is that the outcomes of the decisions will have a bearing on their
performances.On the other hand, if they are carrying out the decision of the
manager, they do not feel responsiblefor the consequences. Their commitment to
perform well is reduced. This is the logic behind
successful teams. The presumption is that the members are endowed with the
knowledge, skill and commitment to perform the activities upon whom they take
decisions. It is the manager’s responsibility to provide them with knowledge and
training to enable them to have confidence. The secret of team work advantage
lies in the following:
1. Clear understanding of the organizational goals, objectives and norms.
2. Open communication among team members;
3. Creation of balance among team members by having a high sense of
ownership;
4. Recognition of the strengths and weaknesses of the members.
5. Closeknit relationship for performance enhancement;
6. Accepting the leadership qualities of one or two members and offering
unconditional support for them;
7. Encouragement of constructive evaluation of each member’s contribution with
a view to resolve problems;
8. Willingness to accept differences of opinion, but capacity to make concessions
with the team in mind.
9. Taking initiative and giving it all to complete challenging jobs.Teams are not
built in a day. Owing to circumstances and opportunities, managements put
together a group of persons, who they have decided will be able to take up a job
or project and complete it.
Since different skills at different levels are needed along with knowledge of
different kinds, an
hierarchy is created. As jobs get done, each of them would have evaluated the
others. Factors of congruence and dissonance will make some adhere and some
depart. During this period the Manager with a knowledgeable Human Resource
person, should facilitate this process. Wherever necessary, training programmes
have to be conducted. Each organisation has to find path it has to take. Top
management’s commitment and competent managers should guide the teams.