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Starting Project Management

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
209 views27 pages

Starting Project Management

Descriptive document on how to start project management

Uploaded by

melao
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Starting Out in

Project Management
Starting Out in
Project
Management
Third edition

Association for Project Management


Association for Project Management
Ibis House, Regent Park
Summerleys Road, Princes Risborough
Buckinghamshire
HP27 9LE

© Association for Project Management 2018

First published 2004


Second edition 2007
Third edition 2018

All rights reserved. No part of this public­a­tion may be repro­duced, stored in a retrieval system, or
trans­mit­ted, in any form or by any means, without the express permis­sion in writing of the
Association for Project Management. Within the UK excep­tions are allowed in respect of any fair
dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criti­cism or review, as permit­ted under
the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, or in the case of repro­graphic repro­duc­tion in
accord­ance with the terms of the licenses issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries
concern­ing repro­duc­tion outside these terms and in other coun­tries should be sent to the Rights
Department, Association for Project Management at the address above.

The authors, Peter Simon and Ruth Murray-Webster, have asser­ted their moral right
under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988 and subsequent amend­ments to be
iden­ti­fied as the authors of this work.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data is avail­able.


Paperback ISBN: 978-1-903494-72-1
eISBN: 978-1-903494-73-8

Cover design by Fountainhead Creative Consultants


Typeset by RefineCatch Limited, Bungay, Suffolk
in 11/14pt Foundry Sans
Contents

List of figures x
Foreword xii
Preface xiii

Fundamental features of project management


Introduction 3
  1 Project manage­ment 5
Projects and project manage­ment 5
What is a project? 5
Projects and business-as-usual 6
Project manage­ment 7
Project manage­ment processes 9
The rela­tion­ship between time, cost and quality 11
  2 Programme manage­ment and port­fo­lio manage­ment 15
Programmes and port­fo­lios 15
What is a programme and what is programme manage­ment? 15
What is a port­fo­lio and what is port­fo­lio manage­ment? 17
  3 Organising for projects 19
The differ­ent roles and respons­ib­il­it­ies required in the
manage­ment of projects 19
Governance and spon­sor­ship of projects 21
The project manage­ment office 21
Methods, processes and proced­ures 22
Organisation struc­tures 22
  4 Project life cycles 27
The project life cycle and project life cycle phases 27
The reasons for split­ting projects into phases 28
Formal gate reviews 30
Other types of life cycle 32
Waterfall versus agile 33

v
Contents

  5 Teamwork and lead­er­ship 35


Project team, team­work, team build­ing and team devel­op­ment 35
Leadership and the role of the leader 37
  6 Conflict manage­ment and nego­ti­ation 41
What is conflict manage­ment? 41
How can the project manager manage conflict? 42
Negotiation in project manage­ment 43

The concept (idea) phase


Introduction 49
  7 Project context 51
PESTLE analysis 52
Legal require­ments 53
Sustainability 54
  8 Stakeholder engage­ment 55
Stakeholders 55
Stakeholder engage­ment 55
Stakeholder analysis 57
  9 Requirements manage­ment 59
Requirements 59
Requirements manage­ment 59
Requirements manage­ment through the project life cycle 62
10 Communication 65
Communication and the contents of a commu­nic­a­tion plan 65
Barriers to commu­nic­a­tion 67
11 Project success 71
Outputs, outcomes and bene­fits 71
Project success criteria and key perform­ance indic­at­ors (KPIs) 72
Benefits 74
Success factors 76
Organisational change manage­ment 78
12 Business case 79
Ownership of a busi­ness case 79
The purpose and content of the busi­ness case 80
Investment appraisal 81
Funding 82

vi
Contents

The definition (planning) phase


Introduction 87
13 Scope manage­ment 89
Decomposing scope into manage­able chunks 91
Using a Responsibility Assignment Matrix (RAM) 92
Managing scope through­out the project 95
14 Quality manage­ment 97
What is quality and what is quality manage­ment? 97
The four elements of quality manage­ment 99
15 Health, safety, secur­ity and envir­on­mental (HSSE)
manage­ment 103
Health and safety 104
Security 104
Environment 104
16 Risk manage­ment 107
Risks to project object­ives 107
A typical project risk manage­ment process 110
The use of a risk log 112
Analysis of overall project risk 113
17 Estimating 115
The estim­at­ing funnel 115
Estimating methods 117
18 Scheduling 121
Key concepts in schedul­ing 121
Milestones 125
19 Resource manage­ment 129
Resource manage­ment/optim­isa­tion, resource smooth­ing and
resource level­ling 129
Resource crit­ical path/crit­ical chain 131
20 Procurement 135
Procurement 135
The purpose of a procure­ment strategy/plan 135
Supplier remu­ner­a­tion (paying suppli­ers) 138
21 Budgeting 141
Creating a budget 141
Cost contin­gency 142

vii
Contents

22 The project manage­ment plan 145


What is the PMP? 145
Why have a PMP? 146

The development (execution) phase


Introduction 151
23 Issue manage­ment 153
Issues and issue manage­ment 153
Issues and risks 153
24 Change control 157
Project change and the use of a change request 157
Change freeze 158
Project change control 159
The steps involved in a change control process and the use of
  the change log (register) 160
25 Configuration manage­ment 165
Configuration iden­ti­fic­a­tion and config­ur­a­tion control 165
Why use config­ur­a­tion manage­ment? 167
26 Monitoring and control 169
Monitoring 169
Earned value manage­ment 171
Control 174
Cost control and cost manage­ment 174
27 Information manage­ment and report­ing 177
Information manage­ment 177
Project report­ing 178

The handover and closure (completion) phase


Introduction 183
28 Handover and Closure 185
Handover 185
Closure 186
29 Post-project reviews and know­ledge manage­ment 189
Conducting a post-project review 189
The import­ance of a post-project review 190
Knowledge manage­ment 192

viii
Contents

Extended and product life cycle phases


Introduction 195
30 Extended and product life cycle phases 197
Benefit real­isa­tion and meas­ure­ment 197
Organisational change manage­ment 197
Benefits track­ing 199
Benefits real­isa­tion reviews 199
Operations 199
Termination 200
Total cost of owner­ship 200

Glossary 201
Index 217

ix
List of figures

1.1 Fundamentals of project manage­ment – over­view 3


1.2 Projects and business-as-usual 7
1.3 Balancing managing and doing 8
1.4 Project manage­ment processes 10
1.5 The project manager’s ‘trilemma’ 13
2.1 Programme spiral life cycle 16
2.2 A port­fo­lio 18
3.1 Project organ­isa­tional roles 20
3.2 Organisation struc­tures 23
4.1 Project Children’s Hospice (PCH) life cycle 29
4.2 Gate reviews provide confid­ence 31
4.3 Extended and product life cycles 32
5.1 The project team 36
5.2 Good project managers lead groups into becom­ing a team 38
6.1 Ways of managing conflict 42
6.2 A five-stage nego­ti­ation process 43
7.1 Concept (idea) phase – over­view 49
7.2 Understanding project context 51
8.1 All stake­hold­ers must be engaged 56
8.2 A stake­holder analysis tool (stake­holder cube) 58
9.1 Requirements manage­ment 60
10.1 Methods of commu­nic­a­tion 66
10.2 Communication Plan for PCH 68
11.1 Success criteria 73
11.2 Success criteria and bene­fits 75
11.3 Critical success factors 77
12.1 Purpose of the busi­ness case 79
12.2 Contents of the busi­ness case 81
13.1 Definition (plan­ning) phase – over­view 87
13.2 Project scope and object­ives 90
13.3 Product break­down struc­ture/work break­down struc­ture
(PBS/WBS) for PCH 93

x
List of figures

13.4 Responsibility assign­ment matrix for PCH 94


14.1 Fit for purpose 98
14.2 Elements of quality manage­ment 101
15.1 Health, safety, secur­ity and envir­on­mental (HSSE) in prac­tice 103
16.1 Risks can be oppor­tun­it­ies or threats 108
16.2 A project risk manage­ment process 111
16.3 A simple risk log for PCH 113
17.1 The estim­at­ing funnel 116
17.2 Different methods of estim­at­ing 118
17.3 A journey to work using a three-point estim­ate and the
PERT formula 119
18.1 Network diagram for PCH 122
18.2 Gantt chart for PCH 123
18.3 Gantt chart showing total and free float for PCH 126
18.4 Milestone plan for PCH 128
19.1 Resource smooth­ing and level­ling 131
19.2 Resource crit­ical path or crit­ical chain 133
20.1 Project procure­ment process 136
20.2 Ways of paying suppli­ers 138
21.1 Base costs plus contin­gency 142
22.1 Purpose and content of the project manage­ment plan (PMP) 145
22.2 Agreeing the PMP 146
23.1 Development (execu­tion) phase – over­view 152
23.2 Escalate to resolve issues 154
24.1 Many things lead to a change 158
24.2 If only we had used formal change control 159
24.3 A change control process 161
25.1 Configuration items 166
25.2 Configuration item status 167
26.1 Gantt chart showing progress for PCH 170
26.2 Example of earned value manage­ment – planned cost curve 172
26.3 Example of earned value manage­ment – with actual costs 173
26.4 Example of earned value manage­ment – earned value 173
27.1 Reporting project status 179
28.1 Handover and closure (comple­tion) phase – over­view 183
28.2 Project handover and closure 186
29.1 Post-project review 190
30.1 Organisational change manage­ment 198

xi
Foreword

As a modern, professional body, we recognise the need to develop talent for the
future by ensuring that the next generation of project manager is equipped with
the core skills required and given clear guidance and support throughout their
career journey.
Since its release in 2004 Starting Out in Project Management has built a
deserved reputation as the ‘go-to guide’ for those new to project management.
The text is easy-to-follow and the diagrams are easy-to-understand. In fact, it’s an
easy read from start to finish.
The latest edition builds on that success and is sure to reward anybody who is
curious to learn more, for example, not just about the time, cost, quality triangle,
but the project manager’s trilemma in trying to balance them.
Starting Out is written as an introductory text, as a good general read, as a
reference book – and as an enduring source of inspiration for any aspiring project
manager.

Association for Project Management–


the chartered body for the project profession
January 2018

xii
Preface

When we wrote the first edition of this book in 2003, our respect­ive chil­dren
Amy, Kirsty, Joel, Megan, Lois (Simon) and Josh and Helen (Murray-Webster)
were all in either univer­sity or school (or pre-school) and project manage­ment
was strug­gling to break out of its tradi­tional roots and into the modern world of
busi­ness and fast-moving organ­isa­tional change. The second edition, published
10 years ago in 2007 was updated slightly, but progress in modern­ising project
manage­ment was slow. We are delighted with the sales of that book and it is our
priv­ilege to be asked to write this third edition. What is really pleas­ing for us is to
see project manage­ment coming of age as an essen­tial, business-critical discip­
line, and a chartered profes­sion. More amazing has been to watch our chil­dren
and their part­ners move either directly or indir­ectly into the world of project
manage­ment and put into prac­tice the profes­sion that has served us well and that
we care so much about. It is with partic­u­lar pride too that we can attrib­ute the
modern­ised figures for this edition to Josh Murray-Webster. Until the fourth
edition . . .

Peter Simon
Ruth Murray-Webster

xiii
Fundamental features of
project manage­ment
Introduction

In this section we discuss some of the main concepts that under­pin project
manage­ment. These include the recog­ni­tion that projects are differ­ent from
business-as-usual, and that along­side projects we have other mech­an­isms for
deliv­er­ing planned change called programmes and port­fo­lios.
We will also discuss the key roles needed to ensure that projects are
success­fully delivered. These include the sponsor and project manager who
work with the project team and with busi­ness users to deliver a project,
report­ing to a steer­ing group/commit­tee. We touch on the ways an
organ­isa­tion can set itself up to deliver projects, recog­nising that differ­ent
arrange­ments suit differ­ent situ­ations.
The idea of a project life cycle is the key differ­en­ti­ator between projects
and business-as-usual. All projects follow a life cycle of some descrip­tion, and
we will outline the basic ideas of a project life cycle and of the exten­ded and
product life cycles.
Finally, projects are delivered by people and an ability to lead teams, nego­ti­ate
and resolve conflicts is a vital skill, so we outline the basic elements of team­work,
lead­er­ship, conflict manage­ment and nego­ti­ation.

Teamwork & Project


leadership management

Conflict Programme &


management Fundamentals of portfolio
& negotiation project management management

Project Organising
life cycle for projects

Figure 1.1  Fundamentals of project management – overview

3
1

Project manage­ment

Projects and project management


Projects and project manage­ment have been around for a very long time. Some of
the iconic build­ings and struc­tures we all know were created over 5,000 years ago
and it is clear that they could not have been construc­ted without a great deal of
plan­ning and organ­isa­tion. However, the discip­line of project manage­ment as we
know it today has been around not nearly so long. Many argue that it is less than
50 years old (from the time of the North Sea oil boom and the first major nuclear
power stations), while others suggest that it is more like 100 years. Henry Gantt of
‘Gantt chart’ fame published his book Organizing for Work in 1919. It doesn’t
really matter when it all started. What is import­ant is that in today’s fast-moving
world the success­ful deliv­ery of projects has never been more import­ant.

What is a project?
At its simplest level the word project is used to describe activ­it­ies that are done to
meet specific object­ives for change. Changes that are managed as projects can
be amend­ments to things that already exist, or the intro­duc­tion of new things. It
can involve new products, new services, or improve­ment to exist­ing products or
services. Whatever the cause of the change and the nature of the project, the
prin­ciples of project manage­ment always apply.
Even though project work involves doing new things, it still needs to be
controlled, so that the specific object­ives are met and the organ­isa­tion actu­ally
gains the desired bene­fits. One way that this control is achieved is by setting
targets or constraints for time, cost and quality. Some people and some organ­
isa­tions prefer to use the term perform­ance rather than quality. For a ‘start­ing out’
book we can use the terms quality and perform­ance inter­change­ably, both
meaning that the project needs to meet defined stake­holder require­ments.
When we talk about stake­hold­ers in project manage­ment, we mean the organ­
isa­tions or people who have an interest or role in the work, or are impacted by it.

5
Starting Out in Project Management

Project work is rarely ever done within a single part of an organ­isa­tion, e.g.
contained within one depart­ment or using a single special­ist group. Project work
cuts across tradi­tional bound­ar­ies and requires people to come together
tempor­ar­ily to focus on achiev­ing the specific project object­ives. As a result,
effect­ive team­work is central to projects.
Doing new things means that the project’s outputs, outcomes and/or
bene­fits can never be predicted with certainty. Uncertain situ­ations are all around
us, but the nature of project work means that there tends to be lots of uncer­tainty
that might affect the project. For example, it is not possible to know with any
degree of certainty how long it will take to create a new design; or to build
some­thing that uses new tech­no­logy. Likewise, it is not possible to know if a team
who have not worked together before will be effect­ive, or whether a new product,
e.g. a Formula One racing car, will perform until it is actu­ally tested, or whether a
new smart phone will sell in the numbers expec­ted. The fact that projects are
uncer­tain means that project managers need to clearly under­stand the
under­pin­ning assump­tions being made by stake­hold­ers, and actively manage
risk through­out the life of the project.
All of the points made so far help define project work as distinct from other
sorts of work. Most organ­isa­tions will be able to separ­ate those tasks that are
done to main­tain the business-as-usual or oper­a­tional activ­it­ies from those things
that are done to intro­duce change, i.e. projects (and programmes).

Projects and business-as-usual


The main way in which projects are differ­ent from the routine busi­ness of work is
asso­ci­ated with the unique­ness of projects. While routine work involves the
repe­ti­tion of processes in a way that gives consist­ency and reli­ab­il­ity, project
work involves doing new things, or modi­fy­ing exist­ing methods and prac­tices.
This means that project work, unlike business-as-usual, will always have a defined
start and an end point, and a partic­u­lar and unique scope of work to do between
those points.
Taking all these consid­er­a­tions together, projects can be said to have the
follow­ing features:

n unique endeav­our with defined start and finish points


n under­taken to achieve specific object­ives for change

n carried out within defined time, cost and quality constraints

6
Project manage­ment

Time

Scope

Cost Quality

Specific Outcomes
objectives

Business benefits
Need to change achieved

Business
as-usual

Figure 1.2  Projects and business-as-usual

n requires team-working across tradi­tional depart­mental bound­ar­ies


n deliv­ers outputs that enable outcomes to the busi­ness that are bene­fi­cial

n neces­sar­ily involves risk that needs to be managed.

Business-as-usual does not meet these criteria.

Project Children’s Hospice (PCH)


You have been approached by a friend to be part of an initi­at­ive to raise
funds for your local chil­dren’s hospice. You work in the headquar­ters
build­ing of a company along with 500 other people. Your friend would like
you to organ­ise a fund-raising event to take place during normal working
hours in exactly 10 weeks’ time. This coin­cides with a number of other
fundrais­ing initi­at­ives that will be happen­ing for the same cause on the
same day. Your initial object­ives are to involve as many people as possible
and to raise at least £10,000 for the charity.

7
Starting Out in Project Management

Project management
If projects are used to intro­duce change, it follows that project manage­ment is
primar­ily about organ­ising and controlling the intro­duc­tion of the desired change.
The words or phrases that tend to be used to describe project manage­ment
include:

n under­stand­ing the needs and require­ments of all the stake­hold­ers


n plan­ning what work needs to be done, when, by whom and to what stand­ards
n build­ing and motiv­at­ing the team to achieve the planned work
n coordin­at­ing the work of a range of differ­ent people
n monit­or­ing that the work is being done to plan (time, cost and quality/
perform­ance)
n taking action to keep the planned work on track, or to change the plan in a

controlled way if that is the best way to achieve the change object­ives
n deliv­er­ing success­ful results (outputs, outcomes and/or bene­fits).

Project manage­ment should be a service to the organ­isa­tion that is request­ing the


change, and is the process by which control is exerted over the project in order
to achieve a desired end point.
Some projects have a dedic­ated project manager who takes respons­ib­il­ity for
deliv­er­ing the project object­ives to time, cost and quality. Where this is the case

Specific objectives
for change

Work Project
content management

Business benefits
Both work content and project management need to be given equal priority

Figure 1.3  Balancing managing and doing

8
Project manage­ment

it will be easy to see that the work the project manager does is focused on the
points in the bulleted list above.
Some projects have a project manager who addi­tion­ally takes on the role of a
tech­nical special­ist within the project team, e.g. a busi­ness analyst who is both
managing the project to estab­lish feas­ib­il­ity for a new computer system, and
doing the busi­ness analysis them­selves, or a manager of a hockey team who is
both managing the organ­isa­tion of a major tour­na­ment and playing in the
tour­na­ment on the day.
When this happens – and it does all the time when projects are small or
contained primar­ily within one part of the organ­isa­tion – it is really import­ant that
the project manager focuses just as much on the manage­ment of the project as
on complet­ing the work that must be done for the project to be a success.

Project Children’s Hospice (PCH)


You are the project manager for Project Children’s Hospice (PCH). It is your
respons­ib­il­ity to plan what needs to be done, making use of as many of the
staff members as is prac­tical. As you are an expert in commu­nic­a­tions
manage­ment, you will prob­ably design and carry out the commu­nic­a­tions
element of the project your­self. It is clearly your respons­ib­il­ity to monitor
the work as it progresses, as well as motiv­ate and coordin­ate your project
team.

Project management processes


Processes are things that turn inputs into outputs.
It follows, then, that project manage­ment processes turn inputs,
includ­ing things such as user require­ments or tech­nical specific­a­tions, into those
outputs that will achieve the specific change object­ives, e.g. new products or
services.
Project manage­ment processes include:

n a start­ing or initi­at­ing process that secures agree­ment to begin a portion of


work
n a plan­ning process that takes an input and turns it into a set of integ­rated plans

against which to imple­ment the project. As the project progresses there is

9
Starting Out in Project Management

invari­ably a need for a re-planning process to reflect project progress or


changes in object­ives
n a monit­or­ing process that meas­ures the progress of a project against its plan,
whether it is ahead or behind sched­ule, over-spending or under-spending
against budget, or deliv­er­ing outputs that meet the desired perform­ance or
quality object­ives
n a controlling process that reacts to the inform­a­tion gathered during monit­or­
ing, and enables decisions to be made to correct late­ness, over-spending or
poor quality
n a learn­ing process that takes an input such as a finished project and turns it
into a set of amended guidelines, processes and check­lists for the next
project
n a closing process that form­ally concludes a portion of work.

You will see a pattern among these processes. They are not specific to
any partic­ul­ar project or any project phase; rather, they are the things
that happen on all projects and in all phases of a project. They are the things
concerned with project manage­ment in general, rather than any specific
project.
The labels and terms used to describe a partic­u­lar project process may vary.
Sometimes it is easy to become confused between the labels given for project
manage­ment processes and the labels given for the phases in a project life cycle.
This will be explored further in Chapter 4, which deals specific­ally with the project
life cycle.

Start

Plan
Replan

Learn Monitor

Control

Close

Figure 1.4  Project management processes

10
Project manage­ment

The fact is, theor­et­ical terms rarely matter. What does matter in prac­tice is that
you not only under­stand the terms that are used in your organ­isa­tion, but also
that you can compare and contrast them with other terms used in published
liter­at­ure about project manage­ment as a means of under­stand­ing what your
organ­isa­tion does and why.

Project Children’s Hospice (PCH)


Your project to raise money for the chil­dren’s hospice charity is made up of
four distinct phases: concept, defin­i­tion, devel­op­ment and handover and
closure. These phases make up the life cycle for your project.
To apply project manage­ment processes, each phase needs to be started,
planned, monitored, controlled and closed, having learned any lessons for
future projects.
PCH day will take place in exactly 10 weeks. This date is not move­able.
You have talked to your boss who is the HR director. She supports the
project and has agreed to act as sponsor but has intro­duced the follow­ing
new constraints, within which you must manage the project:

n Whatever you do must not offend anyone.


n The whole project must not eat up more than 1,000 hours of work time
for staff, includ­ing you.
n There should be no more than £500 of external expendit­ure.

n The company should get good press through local news­pa­per, radio and

TV cover­age.

The relationship between time, cost


and quality
Time, cost and quality are the three attrib­utes that are typic­ally described as
either object­ives or constraints for any project. For example:

n The project must be completed by 31 December 2020.


n The project must not spend more than £500,000.
n The products and services created must meet specific­a­tion X456.

11
Starting Out in Project Management

Sometimes these attrib­utes are altern­at­ively stated as sched­ule, budget and


perform­ance, but here we will refer to time, cost and quality. The rela­tion­ship
between these three attrib­utes is at the heart of project manage­ment.
It is unlikely that any project could ever achieve object­ives that are considered
to be the quick­est, the cheapest and the best, even though that is what we would
all like. In fact, if a project has to be delivered to meet a chal­len­ging finish date, it
is likely that it will cost the organ­isa­tion more overall than if it had a more relaxed
sched­ule. Likewise, if a project has to achieve a tight specific­a­tion for quality, it
will prob­ably cost more or take longer than it would have if the quality require­ments
had been reduced.
Projects are inten­ded to be planned taking the relat­ive prior­it­ies of time, cost
and quality into account at the start, but given the chal­lenges of estim­at­ing and
the inher­ent uncer­tain­ties within projects, it is perhaps no surprise that projects
need to adjust over time and that (for example) projects involving public safety
end up taking longer and costing more than origin­ally planned because, during
deliv­ery, quality is given greater prior­ity than time and cost. Similarly, projects
that need to be completed by a certain date, perhaps build­ing a new stadium for
a planned sport­ing event, almost invari­ably cost more than planned and/or have
a finished product that is to a lower specific­a­tion than was origin­ally conceived.
Projects are unique, and initial plans that reflect time, cost and quality object­ives
are, in reality, ‘educated guesses’ that need to be imple­men­ted in an uncer­tain
world. In such a scen­ario, it is rare for the project to proceed exactly to plan. The
more usual situ­ation is that some­thing happens that requires the project manager
to make a ‘trade-off’ – to take more time to achieve the specific­a­tion, to spend
more money to hold the dead­line, or to agree reduced quality in order to hold the
time and cost plans.
Because such dilem­mas typify project manage­ment, the trian­gu­lar rela­tion­ship
between time, cost and quality is often called the ‘iron triangle of project
manage­ment’ or the ‘project manager’s trilemma’.
Often the area inside the triangle is said to repres­ent the project scope, i.e. all
the work that has to be done to achieve the time, cost and quality object­ives. This
is clearly another attrib­ute of the project that can be varied as long as the project
manager can be certain that an amended scope will still deliver the outcomes and
bene­fits that the organ­isa­tion requires from the change. A reduc­tion in scope
means that less work will be done, which then makes time and cost object­ives
more achiev­able. Sometimes there is a confu­sion between scope and quality.
Scope defines the outputs of the project. Outputs are usually phys­ical things,
such as a docu­ment, a wall or a pump. Quality defines the grade or specific­a­tion

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Project manage­ment

Time

Scope

Cost Quality
What comes first?

Figure 1.5  The project manager’s trilemma

that the project outputs (the docu­ment, wall or pump in this example) need to be
delivered to. Some parts of the scope (outputs) can be less tangible, such as
changes in beha­viour of staff. In this case defin­ing quality can be more diffi­cult
but is still required.
It follows, then, that the most import­ant thing for a project manager to
under­stand when balan­cing the time, cost and quality object­ives is the relat­ive
prior­ity of object­ives for the client organ­isa­tion. Is it more import­ant to finish on
time, on budget or to the right quality?

Project Children’s Hospice (PCH)


For Project Children’s Hospice you under­stand the relat­ive prior­it­ies to be:
first, time, because the date is fixed; second, cost, because your boss has
given you an effect­ive maximum budget; and third, quality (in terms of
posit­ive aware­ness gener­ated and funds raised), as no prom­ises have been
made to the national charity.

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