Chapter 6 - Project Activity Planning
Chapter 6 - Project Activity Planning
Chapter 6
Project Planning
Project Planning
Chapter 5-4
Composite Plan
Chapter 5-5
Project Plan
Chapter 5-6
Project Plan Elements
The process of developing the project plan varies
among organizations, but any project plan must
contain the following elements:
Chapter 5-8
Project Plan Elements
Personnel - this section lists the expected personnel
requirements of the project including special skills, training
needs, and security clearances
Evaluation Methods - every project should be evaluated
against standards and by methods established at the project’s
inception
Potential Problems - this section should include any
potential difficulties such as subcontractor default, technical
failure, tight deadlines, resource limitations and the like.
Preplanning may avert some crises
Chapter 5-9
Project Planning in Action
Project plans are usually constructed by
listing the sequence of activities required to
carry the project from start to completion,
and developing an action plan to complete
the activities
This helps the planner decide the necessary
sequence of things
Sequencing is a necessary consideration for
determining the project schedule and duration
Chapter 5-10
Project Planning in Action
Chapter 5-12
Systems Integration
Systems Integration is one part of integration
management and plays a crucial role in the
performance aspect of the project
Chapter 5-13
Systems Integration
Systems Integration is concerned with three
major objectives:
Performance - what a system does
Effectiveness - achieve desired performance in an
optimal manner
Requires no component specifications unless necessary to
meet one or more systems requirements
Every component requirement should be traceable to one or
more systems requirements
Design components to optimize system performance, not
the performance of subsystems
Cost Systems - cost is a design parameter
Chapter 5-14
Hierarchical Planning
System
Items 1-5 focus on the WBS as a planning tool but it may also
be used to monitor and control the project
Chapter 5-21
The Work Breakdown Structure
Items 6 and 7 focus on the WBS as an aid to monitor
and control a project:
6. The project manager can examine actual resource use,
by work element, work package, task, up to the full
project level. The project manager can identify
problems, harden the estimates of final cost, and make
sure that relevant corrections have been designed and are
ready to implement
7. The project schedule may be subjected to the same
comparisons as the project budget. Actual progress is
compared to scheduled and corrective action can be taken
Chapter 5-22
Interface Coordination through
Integration Management
The most difficult aspect of implementing a
project is the coordination and integration of the
various elements of the project
The intricate process of coordinating the work
and timing of all inputs is called integration
management
Interface coordination is used to denote the
process of managing this work across multiple
groups
Chapter 5-23
Approaches to Interface
Management
Recent work on managing the interface
focuses on the use of multifunctional teams
(MT)
There is general agreement that MT has a
favorable impact on product/service design and
delivery
Successfully involving cross-functional teams in
project planning requires that some structure
be imposed on the planning process
Chapter 5-24
Approaches to Interface
Management
A different attack on the problem is defining and
mapping all interdependencies between the various
members of the project team
Rather than mapping interfaces on the firm’s organizational
chart, instead it maps the interdependencies directly
Does not ignore the value of the WBS, action plan, or
PERT/CPM networks, but simply uses interface maps as a
source of the coordination requirement to manage the
interdependencies
Chapter 5-25