Project Prioritisation Presentation
Project Prioritisation Presentation
THE PROBLEM
Extremely high demand for Corporate IT projects / services Very lean teams / low capacity
Network business and IT had formalised project management methodologies based on PMBOK Immature portfolio management process for major network projects, but process too network centric not suitable for adoption by IT.
THE APPROACH
We followed up our research with analyst queries and spoke about our findings with Gartner experts to confirm our understanding. We spoke with our peers to validate our findings. The results?
We didnt believe the business was ready for full-blown project and portfolio management a progressive journey would be required. We determined the most value would be delivered by focussing only on project prioritisation and selection / scheduling.
Lack of transparency about how proposals are scored is the end of buy-in. Mark Raskino, Research Director, Gartner
THE SOLUTION
WEIGHTED CRITERIA
Assess every project against a standard set of (objective) criteria Score each criteria using the same scale (out of 10) Apply a weighting to each criteria, based on how important that criteria is Calculate the priority of the project by adding up the weighted criteria
Example: 3 criteria, each assessed out of 10 (a, b, c) A = 5, B = 6, C = 2 Priority = 5 20% + 6 50% + 2 30% Priority = 1 + 3 + 0.6 Priority = 4.6
Criteria A B C Total
The basic approach is fairly straight-forward, the key is to select the right criteria to assess projects against. Some important principles to apply when defining your criteria:
They must be relevant to the business You need to be able to assess them relatively easily They need to be as objective as possible
TRANSENDS CRITERIA
We used the following criteria:
Financial costs / benefits Intangible / usability improvements Support of strategic corporate objectives (from corporate plan) Business risk and compliance Project risk * Project dependencies *
At this point we realised it was getting complicated electronic forms for the win!
Process requires business to identify business risks and compliance obligations the project helps manage
Uses risks and compliance obligations from the official corporate risk & compliance register Common-language options used to identify how important the project is to the management of each risk / compliance obligation Matrix used to combine risk/compliance rating and project contribution into a score Criteria assigned the highest score of any risk or obligation
PROJECT RISK
First of 2 special criteria used to adjust project score of particularly risky projects ONLY criteria to reduce the priority of a project Various project risks are identified and assessed. Highest risk rating is used
DEPENDENCIES
We realised early on that some projects are enablers for later projects the primary benefits are delivered by different projects (e.g. implementing a platform that is required for a later high-value project)
Process acknowledges this by linking such related projects and taking the highest priority score (this is a little simplistic, but works and avoids making the process too onerous)
IMPLEMENTATION
OR, HOW DID WE MAKE IT SIMPLE ENOUGH TO USE?
Built a dedicated SharePoint site for the process and made it fully accessible to the business (transparency) Built an InfoPath form for registering projects. It gathers the basic information required and automatically calculates the project priority. InfoPath form allows supporting documents to be attached (estimate spread sheets etc) SharePoint lists track the project backlogs (sorted by priority of course), active projects, fast track requests and scheduling documents
SCHEDULING PROCESS
Executive set all weightings at least once per year (although they are permitted to change these at any point through a vote at one of their regular meetings)
Projects can be added to the backlog at any time Project schedules locked in every quarter
Draft schedules prepared by taking base staff capacity and subtracting leave & public holidays, operational splits, ongoing projects from previous quarter and other impacts (such as projects from other areas of the business)
Draft schedule published and business granted chance to request changes to schedule Final schedule approved by executive (including changes). If changes approved the executive is responsible for either identifying projects to be removed from the schedule to free up capacity, or approving IT to seek additional capacity. Additional capacity can be achieved by outsourcing projects (or parts of projects) or by backfilling positions. The process leaves the decision as to how to best achieve the necessary capacity up to Corporate IT
FAST-TRACKING PROJECTS
Fast-track process included to provide flexibility to manage critical, last-minute projects Fast-track projects must be approved by the business units executive and the business services executive If fast-track approval granted, executive must nominate whether removing existing projects or adding additional resources Guiding principles:
Imminent harm Legal exposure Regulator compliance
20/20
PROCESS REVIEW
PROCESS REVIEW
We conducted a formal review of the process after 12 months of operation and reported back to the Executive
Primary tool as a business survey targeted management and users who had used the process, but encouraged all staff to participate
Response was positive; strong support for the process, perceived potential for bias but business didnt feel that had eventuated. Some tweaks to the criteria recommended, but these were minor:
Update to new corporate objectives Adjust priority weightings