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Module 03 Integration Management

The document outlines Project Integration Management, emphasizing the coordination of various project elements through defined processes. It discusses the importance of the Project Charter, which formalizes project authorization and objectives, and details the development of the Project Management Plan that consolidates all planning components. Additionally, it covers processes for managing project work, knowledge, and changes throughout the project lifecycle.
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
4 views

Module 03 Integration Management

The document outlines Project Integration Management, emphasizing the coordination of various project elements through defined processes. It discusses the importance of the Project Charter, which formalizes project authorization and objectives, and details the development of the Project Management Plan that consolidates all planning components. Additionally, it covers processes for managing project work, knowledge, and changes throughout the project lifecycle.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Project Integration Management

3
CTEC210
Fundamentals of
Project Management
Agenda

 Review Project Management Concepts


 Team Development
 Conflict Management
 The Role of Project Manager
 Organizational Types
 Project Integration Management

2
Project Integration Management

 Bringing it all together


 Processes to ensure that various project elements are
properly coordinated
 PM determines level of implementation for each process
 PM processes are identified as discrete
 but processes overlap and interact with each other
 Integration must occur in other areas as well
 Projects with ongoing operations
 Product scope and project scope
 PM software may span all process groups

3
Project Integration Processes
4.2 Develop Project
4.1 Develop Project Charter Management Plan

INITIATING PLANNING 4.3 Direct and Manage


PROCESSES PROCESSES Project Work
4.4 Manage Project
Knowledge

MONITORING
EXECUTING
& CONTROLLING
PROCESSES
PROCESSES

4.5 Monitor and Control Project Work


4.6 Perform Integrated Change
CLOSING 4.7 Close Project
Control
PROCESSES or Phase

4
Project Charter

 After deciding what project to work on, it is important to formalize


projects
 A project charter is a document that formally recognizes the
existence of a project and provides direction on the project’s
objectives and management
 Establishes authorization for the project by someone external to the
project such as a sponsor, PMO, or portfolio steering committee – at
a level appropriate to fund the project
 Key project stakeholders should sign a project charter to
acknowledge agreement on the need and intent of the project
 Establishes a partnership between the performing organization and
the requesting organization
 May delegate the creation of the project charter to the PM
 Links the project to the strategy and ongoing work of the
organization.

5
4.1 Develop Project Charter

Inputs Tools and Outputs


Techniques
• Business • Expert judgment • Project charter
documents • Data gathering • Assumption log
• Agreements • Interpersonal
• Enterprise and team skills
environmental • Meetings
factors
• Organizational
process assets

Adapted from Figure 4-2, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK®
Guide) - Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017. Copyright and all rights reserved.
Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI. 6
Develop Project Charter: Inputs

 Business case  Enterprise environmental


documents factors
 Business case – review the  Government or industry
cost-benefit analysis and standards, legal and
consider the market regulatory requirements,
demand, organizational marketplace conditions,
need, customer request, organizational culture and
etc. political climate, etc.
 Benefits management plan  Organizational process
 Agreements assets
 For example,  Organizational standard
memorandums of policies, process, and
understanding (MOU), procedures; governance
service level agreement framework; monitoring and
(SLA), etc. reporting methods; and
templates
7
Develop Project Charter:
Tools and Techniques
 Expert judgment  Interpersonal and
 Include individuals or team skills
groups with specialized  Conflict management
knowledge or training  Facilitation
 Data gathering  Meeting management
 Brainstorming  Meetings
 Focus groups  Work with stakeholders
 Interviews to identify the project
objectives, success
criteria, etc.
8
Develop Project Charter: Outputs

 Project charter
 Document that formally authorizes a project or
phase
 What is the organizational strategic objective the
project is meant to achieve?
 Assumption log
 High-level strategic and operational assumptions
and constraints

9
Project Charter Questions

 What is the organizational strategic


objective the project is meant to achieve?
 What are the objectives for the project?
 What is the purpose or justification?
 What are the high-level requirements?
 What are the high-level project description and
boundaries?
 Who is involved in the project?
 What are the assumptions and constraints?

10
Project Charter Questions
(continued)
 What are the objectives for the project?
 What are the measureable project objectives and
related success criteria
 What are the project approval requirements (i.e.
what constitutes project success, who decides the
project is successful, and who signs off on the
project)?
 What are the key milestones?
 What is the summary budget?
 What are the high-level risks?

11
Project Charter Questions
(continued)
 What are the assumptions and constraints?
 Organizational: formal and informal policies, procedures,
guidelines, plans, standards, knowledge base from
previous projects
 Environmental: company culture, structure company
infrastructure, equipment, facilities, current human
resources and their skills and competencies, project
management information systems, software, web
interfaces, etc.
 External: consultants, industry groups, professional
associations, departments within performing organization,
etc., market place conditions, stakeholder risk tolerances,
governmental or industry standards.

12
Project Charter Questions
(continued)
 Who is involved in the project?
 Who are the key stakeholders for the project?
 Who is the assigned project manager,
responsibility, and authority level
 Who are the project sponsor and other persons
involved in authorizing the project charter?

13
4.2 Develop Project Management
Plan
 Defines, prepares and coordinates all plan
components and consolidates them into an
integrated project management plan
 Defines how the project is executed,
monitored and controlled, and closed
 Either a summary level or detailed depending
on the size and complexity of the project
 The project management plan is not just the
Microsoft Project file or a project schedule!

14
4.2 Develop Project Management
Plan

Inputs Tools and Outputs


• Project charter
Techniques • Project
• Expert judgment
• Outputs from management
• Data gathering
planning plan
• Interpersonal and
processes
team skills
• Enterprise
• Meetings
environmental
factors
• Organizational
process assets

Adapted from Figure 4-4, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK®
Guide) – Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017. Copyright and all rights reserved. 15
Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI.
Develop Project Management Plan:
Inputs
 Project charter
 Documents the business needs, current understanding of the customer’s needs, and
the new product, service or result that it is intended to satisfy

 Outputs from planning across all knowledge areas


 Information from the subsidiary plans is used to fully development this plan

 Enterprise environmental factors


 Governmental or industry standards
 Project management information systems
 Organization structure and culture
 Infrastructure
 Personnel administration

 Organizational process assets


 Standardized guidelines, work instructions, proposal evaluation criteria, and
performance measurement criteria
 Project management plan template
 Change control procedures
 Project files from past projects

16
Develop Project Management Plan:
Tools and Techniques
 Expert judgment
 Tailor the process to meet the needs of the project
 Develop technical and management details to be included in the project
management plan
 Determine resources and skill levels needed to perform project work
 Define the level of configuration management to apply on the project
 Determine which project documents will be subject to the formal change
control process
 Data gathering
 Brainstorming, checklists, focus groups and interviews
 Interpersonal and team skills
 Conflict management, facilitation and meeting management
 Meetings
 Schedule a kick-off meeting, either at the beginning of the project, or
between the end of project planning and the start of project execution

17
Develop Project Management Plan:
Outputs
 Project management plan
 Integrates and consolidates all of the subsidiary management plans and
baselines from the planning processes and includes but is not limited to:
 The life cycle selected for the project and the processes that will be
applied to each phase
 Results of the tailoring by the project management team
 How work will be executed to accomplish the project objectives
 A change management plan that documents how changes will be
monitored and controlled
 A configuration management plan that documents how configuration
management will be performed
 How integrity of the performance measurement baselines will be
maintained
 Need and techniques for the communication among stakeholders
 Key management reviews for content, extent, and timing to facilitate
addressing open issues and pending decisions

18
Develop Project Management Plan:
Outputs
 Project management plan  Subsidiary management
 Project baselines plans
 Scope  Scope
 Schedule  Requirements
 Cost
 Schedule
 Additional components
 Cost
 Change management plan
 Configuration management  Quality
plan  Resource
 Performance measurement  Communications
baseline
 Risk
 Project life cycle
 Development approach  Procurement
 Management reviews  Stakeholder
 Subsidiary Management
Plans

19
Project Management Plan and
Project Documents

20
4.3 Direct and Manage Project Work

 Leading and performing the work defined in the


project management plan
 Implementing approved changes to achieve the
project’s objectives

21
4.3 Direct and Manage Project Work
Inputs Tools and Outputs
Techniques
• Project management • Expert judgment • Deliverables
plan • Project management • Work performance data
• Project documents information system • Issue log
• Approved change • Meetings • Change requests
requests • Project management
• Enterprise plan updates
environmental factors • Project documents
• Organizational updates
process assets • Organizational process
assets updates

Adapted from Figure 4-6 A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® 22
Guide) - Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017. Copyright and all rights reserved.
Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI.
Direct and Manage Project Work:
Outputs
 Deliverables  Project management
 Completed and approved plan updates
 Work performance data  Update as needed as per
 Raw observations and the change control
measurements identified process
during activities
 Project document
 Issue log updates
 Type, description,
priority, status, etc.  Activity list, assumption
log, lessons learned
 Change requests register, etc.
 Corrective, preventive,
defect repair and  Organizational process
updates assets updates
23
4.4 Manage Project Knowledge

 Uses existing knowledge and create new


knowledge to achieve the project’s objectives
 Contributes to organizational learning
 Helps produce or improve project outcomes
 Supports organizational operations and fuure
projects or phases

24
4.4 Manage Project Knowledge
Inputs Tools and Outputs
Techniques
• Project management • Expert judgment • Lessons learned
plan • Knowledge register
• Project documents management • Project management
• Deliverables • Information plan updates
• Enterprise management • Organizational process
environmental factors • Interpersonal and assets updates
• Organizational team skills
process assets

Adapted from Figure 4-8, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® 25
Guide) - Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017. Copyright and all rights reserved.
Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI.
Manage Project Knowledge: Outputs

 Lessons learned register


 Includes impacts, recommendations and actions
 Records challenges, problems, realized risks and
opportunities, or other content as appropriate
 Project management plan updates
 Update as needed as per the change control
process
 Organizational process assets update
 Codify or embed new knowledge as needed
26
4.5 Monitor and Control Project
Work
 With the proper project plan in place, the project
manager is equipped with the necessary baselines
against which to measure performance and
 Determine any necessary corrective or preventive action
 Analyze, track and report on the status of project risks and
the implementation of their respective response plans
 Identify any emerging trends affecting performance
 Report on progress and forecast project completion data
 Monitor implementation of approved changes

27
4.4 Monitor and Control Project
Work
Inputs Tools and Outputs
Techniques
• Project management • Expert judgment • Work performance
plan • Data analysis reports
• Project documents • Decision making • Change requests
• Work performance • Meetings • Project management
information plan updates
• Agreements • Project documents
• Enterprise updates
environmental factors
• Organizational
process assets

Adapted from Figure 4-10, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® 28
Guide) - Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017. Copyright and all rights reserved.
Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI.
Monitor and Control Project Work:
Outputs
 Work performance  Project management
reports plan updates
 Combined, recorded  Any component
and distributed
 Project documents
 Change requests
 Expand, adjust or
updates
reduce the project or  Costs forecasts, issue
product scope, quality log, lessons learned
requirements, and register, risk register
schedule or cost and schedule forecasts
baselines

29
4.6 Perform Integrated Change
Control
 Performed throughout the project
 Capture changes that occur, analyze, reject or accept them and then
integrate the approved changes into the project plan and its baselines
 Changes must be managed
 Identify changes that need to occur
 Influence factors which create change to ensure only approved changes
are implemented
 Maintain integrity of baseline by releasing only approved changes and
maintaining their documentation
 Review, approve or deny all recommended corrective and preventive
actions
 Coordinate change across the project and updating project
documentation (schedule changes, cost, risk, quality, staffing)
 Document the impact of change requests
 Align quality of work performance to required quality standards

30
Perform Integrated Change Control
(continued)
 Changes may be requested by any stakeholder on the project
 All changes should be recorded in the change management
and/or configuration management systems
 Effective way to centrally manage changes and baselines
 Configuration control is focused on specification of deliverables and
processes
 Change control is focused on identifying, documenting and controlling
changes to the project and baselines
 Applying the configuration management system with integrated
change control processes provides:
 A method to identify and request changes to project baselines
 Opportunity to continuously validate and improve the impact of each
change on the project
 Consistent communication of both approved and rejected changes

31
4.6 Perform Integrated Change
Control
Inputs Tools and Outputs
Techniques
• Project management • Expert judgment • Approved change
plan • Change control tools requests
• Project documents • Data analysis • Project management
• Work performance • Decision making plan updates
reports • Meetings • Project documents
• Change requests updates
• Enterprise
environmental factors
• Organizational
process assets

Adapted from Figure 4-12, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® 32
Guide) – Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017. Copyright and all rights reserved.
Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI.
Perform Integrated Change Control:
Inputs
 Project management plan  Change requests
 Change management plan,  Corrective and preventive
configuration management plan, actions affect performance
scope baseline, schedule against the baselines, not
baseline and cost baseline the actual baselines
 Project documents  Enterprise environmental
 Basis of estimates, requirements factors
traceability matrix and risk report
 Work performance reports  Organizational process
 Resource availability, schedule
assets
and cost data, earned value  Change control procedures,
management (EVM) reports, and authorizations for approving
burnup or burndown charts and issuing changes,
databases, project files,
configuration management
knowledge base

33
Perform Integrated Change Control:
Outputs
 If a change request can be performed but is outside
of the project scope, a baseline change is required
if approved
 Approved change requests
 Changes, regardless of whether it is approved or rejected,
are updated in the change log
 Project management plan updates
 Any component
 Project documents updates
 Change log

34
Change Opportunity and
Change Costs
Relative impact

Costs of
Opportunity
Implementing
for Making
Changes
Changes

Progress of the project


35
Change Avoidance

1 Proactive Approach
 Complete user requirements
 Detailed document

 Scope Statement approval


 Departmental signoff

 Focus groups
 Visible and cross-departmental

 Client communications
 Presentations, newsletters
 Other means of ensuring stakeholders are aware

36
Change Avoidance

2 Freeze Approach
 Force the client and users to deal with issue
 A freeze date is established at the outset
 Date cannot be postponed
 Freeze project before the end of design
 Ensure executive support
 No exceptions

37
Change Avoidance

3 Postponement Approach
 Linked to freeze approach
 Collection of all requests, without action
 Sub-project to implement some, not all
 Main project schedule is unaffected
 Resolve conflicting changes
 Economies of scale are possible
 Decide once the total cost is known

38
Change Avoidance

4 Procedural Approach
 Escalation of approval
 Changes are reviewed at executive level

 Ensure changes meet project objectives


 Do all user groups agree with the change?

 Enable access to project reserve funds


 Increase total budget

39
Project Change Request - Internal

 PM must implement a formal change process


 Requests for change come from Owner or Client
 Users may also request changes
 Statement of change - what is really required?
 Reason for change vs. original purpose
 Estimate of change impact
 Effect on activities already completed
 Potential rework requirements
 Effect on future activities - possible to identify
 Effect on schedule - what will be delayed?
 Effect on costs - what are the added expenditures?

40
Change Request Process - External

 PM must assess the impact on work in progress


 Especially that under contract to consultants, suppliers
 A consultant/supplier can only suggest changes
 Owner is not obligated to consider/approve any suggestions
 Change Notice
 Requests a contractor/supplier to quote the cost/time impact of
a proposed change in the work
 Change Order
 instructs the contractor/supplier to implement a specific
change immediately

41
4.7 Close Project or Phase

 Once confirmed, the project or phase can be


closed, all information will be reviewed by the
project manager to ensure all work has been
completed and the project objectives met
 If a project is terminated before completion, the
procedures to determine the reasons will be
established at this time
 Administrative closure will also be performed to
complete the project or phase

42
4.6 Close Project or Phase

Inputs Tools and Outputs


• Project charter
Techniques • Project documents
• Expert judgment
• Project updates
• Data analysis
management plan • Final product,
• Meetings
• Project documents service, or result
• Accepted transition
deliverables • Final report
• Business • Organizational
documents process assets
• Agreements updates
• Procurement
documentation
• Organizational
process assets

Adapted from Figure 4-14, A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® 43
Guide) – Sixth Edition, Project Management Institute, Inc., 2017. Copyright and all rights reserved.
Material from this publication has been reproduced with the permission of PMI.
Close Project or Phase: Inputs

 Project charter  Project documents


 Project management plan  Assumption log
 Basis of estimates
 All components
 Change log
 Accepted deliverables  Issue log
 Business documents  Lessons learned register
 Business case  Milestone list
 Benefits management plan  Project communications
 Agreements  Quality control
measurements
 Procurement  Quality reports
documentation  Requirements
 Organizational process documentation
assets  Risk register
 Risk report

44
Close Project or Phase

Tools and Techniques Outputs


 Expert judgment  Project documents
updates
 Data analysis
 Lessons learned register
 Document analysis
 Final product, service,
 Regression analysis
or result transition
 Trend analysis
 Final report
 Variance analysis
 Organizational process
 Meetings assets updates

45
Close Project or Phase:
Closure Procedures
 Activities, roles and responsibilities of all team
members and other stakeholders involved in
closing the project or phase
 Activities include:
 Collection of project records
 Analysis of project success and effectiveness
 Documentation of lessons learned
 Archiving project information for future use
 Develop procedures to transfer project products/services to
production and/or operations
 Procedures to confirm that project has met all client
requirements
 Verification that all deliverables have been delivered and
accepted
 Validation that all exit criteria have been met

46
Close Project or Phase:
Transition and Updates
 Transition of final product, services or result to the
customer
 Receipt of a formal statement confirming that the
terms of the contract have been met and that the
customer has officially accepted the deliverables
 Project files completed with project documentation
such as: plans, baselines, risk registers, planned
risk response plans and risk impact
 Lessons learned documented and archived

47
Closing the Project

 The purpose of properly terminating a project is to


learn from the experience in order to improve
performance on future projects.
 Termination activities should be identified in the
baseline plan
 Assure that all payments have been collected from
the customer
 Assure that all payments for materials and
subcontractors have been paid

48
Closing the Project (continued)

 Prepare a written performance evaluation of


each member of the project team
 Hold post-project evaluation meetings
 Celebrate

49
Early Project Termination

 If research shows costs will be much more


than originally anticipated
 If there is a change in a company’s financial
situation
 Because of dissatisfaction of the customer
 Avoid early termination due to customer
dissatisfaction by monitoring customer satisfaction
continually and taking corrective action

50
Internal Post-Project Evaluation

 Have individual meetings with team members


and a group meeting with the project team
 Hold soon after the completion
 Announce meeting in advance so people can
be prepared
 Individual meetings allow team members to
give their personal impressions

51
Internal Post-Project Evaluation
(continued)

 Develop an agenda for a group meeting


 Group meeting should discuss performance and
recommendations for improvement
 Issue a brief written report to management with
a summary and recommendations

52
Internal Post-Project Evaluation
(continued)
 Some topics that might be discussed:
 Technical performance
 Cost performance
 Schedule performance
 Project planning and control
 Customer relationships
 Team relationships
 Communications
 Problem identification and resolution/recommendations

53
Customer Feedback
 Meet to discuss whether the project provided the
customer with the anticipated benefits, assess
the level of customer satisfaction, and obtain any
feedback
 Participants include the project manager, key
project team members, and key representatives
of the customer
 Ask open-ended questions
 Customers can express their level of satisfaction
and provide detailed comments

54
Customer Feedback (continued)

 If the customer is satisfied with the project:


 Ask about other projects you could do—perhaps
without going through a competitive RFP process
 Ask permission to use the customer as a
reference
 Get feedback regarding satisfaction through a
post-project customer evaluation survey

55
Ethical Behavior

 Unethical behavior is rationalized:


 It’s not hurting anyone
 Everybody does it
 Ethical behavior is built on trust, which is
crucial for business relations development
between
 Customers
 Suppliers
 Subcontractors
56
Ethical Behavior

 Examples of unethical behavior


 Knowingly use marginal or unsafe materials or
design
 Putting pressure on the project team to charge
more or less hours than they actually worked to
mislead management or customers that project is
on budget
 Knowingly approving test results that are
inaccurate
 Paying off inspectors to approve work that
otherwise will not pass inspection
57
Ethical Behavior

 Examples of unethical behavior


 Intentionally submitting a low bid on a proposal with
the intention that you will make up the price by
charging the customer for high priced changes after
getting the contract
 Purchasing material from suppliers who give you
“kickbacks”
 Dishonesty in time card reporting of hours worked
resulting in overcharges to the customer
 Padding or falsifying travel expenses
 Plagiarizing the work of others and taking credit for
them

58
Ethical Behavior

 Key principles of ethical behavior


 Treat others the way you would like to be treated
(project managers set the example)
 Don’t do anything that you wouldn’t want your
family, friends, neighbors or coworkers to read
about it in the newspaper or hear on the news

59

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