Project Management

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Chapter1-IntroductiontoProjectManagement1.pptx

CONTEMPORARY PROJECT MANAGEMENT, 4E

Timothy J. Kloppenborg

Vittal Anantatmula

Kathryn N. Wells

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Introduction to Project Management

Chapter 1

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The Element of Discipline

“A key to success in project management, as well as in mountain climbing, is to identify the pillars that will be practiced with discipline...I believe that project management is about applying common sense with uncommon discipline.”

Michael O’Brochta, PMP

founder of Zozer Inc.

previously senior project manager at the Central Intelligence Agency

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Deaths climbing Mt. Aconcagua are an extreme example of consequences associated with a lack of discipline

Discipline to act on the earlier decision to curtain summit attempts after the agreed-to-turn-around time or in severe weather

Avoid pressure to cast aside or shortcut project management practices

Practices, like planning, are the pillars of project management discipline

Managing projects at the CIA involved short notice to acquire unspent funds

Discipline required needed planning and quick action

The top 2 percent of project managers spend twice as much time planning as the other 98 percent

Identify those pillars that we will decide to practice with the required levels of discipline

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Chapter 1 Core Objectives

Define a project and project management and tell why organizations would use them

Describe major activities and deliverables, at each project life cycle stage

List the 10 knowledge areas and 5 process groups of the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK)

Describe project success and failure, as well as reasons both may occur

Contrast predictive and adaptive project life cycles

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Chapter 1 Behavioral Objectives:

Identify project roles and key responsibilities for project team members

Describe the importance of collaborative effort throughout a project

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What is a project?

Projects require:

an organized set of work efforts.

progressively elaborated detail.

a defined beginning and ending.

a unique combination of stakeholders.

Projects are subject to time and resource limitations

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project – “a temporary endeavor undertaken to

create a unique product, service, or result.” PMBOK® Guide

stakeholders – “an individual, or organization who may affect, be affected by, or perceive itself to be affected by a decision, activity, or outcome of a project.” PMBOK® Guide

A project requires an organized set of work efforts.

Projects require a level of detail that is progressively elaborated upon as more information is discovered.

Projects are subject to limitations of time and resources such as money and people.

Projects have a defined beginning and ending.

A project has a unique combination of stakeholders

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Project Management (PM)

Work processes

Tradeoffs among

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Project management – “the application of knowledge, skills, tools and techniques to project activities to meet project requirements.” PMBOK® Guide

initiate, plan, execute, monitor/control, close

Scope Schedule

Quality Resources

Cost Risks

PM includes work processes that initiate, plan, execute, and close work

Work processes require tradeoffs among the scope, quality, cost, and schedule of the project

PM includes administrative tasks for planning, documenting, and controlling work

PM includes leadership tasks for visioning, motivating, and promoting work associates.

PM knowledge, skills, and methods apply for most projects

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Project Management (PM)

Administrative tasks

Leadership tasks for work associates

Knowledge, skills, and methods apply for most projects

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Planning, documenting controlling

Visioning, motivating, promoting

PM includes administrative tasks for planning, documenting, and controlling work

PM includes leadership tasks for visioning, motivating, and promoting work associates.

PM knowledge, skills, and methods apply for most projects

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History of PM

Emerged as a formal discipline in the 1950s

Developed for aerospace and construction

Involved determining and controlling project schedules

In 2001, Agile was created for adaptive project planning, originally for software projects

In recent years, more focus has been given to the “soft skills” of communications, leadership, and teamwork

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PM emerged as a formal discipline in the 1950s

Techniques for planning and controlling schedules and costs were developed for huge aerospace and construction projects in the 1950s and 1960s

Early PM involved determining project schedules based on order of project activities

Manufacturing, research and development, government, and construction projects used and refined management techniques

Software companies offered software for planning and controlling project costs and schedules in the 1980s and 1990s

Risk management techniques for complex projects have been applied to less complex projects

Communication and leadership playa major role in project success

Rapid growth and change in information technology and telecommunications fueled use of PM in the 1990s and 2000s

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How Can Project Work Be Described?

Projects versus operations

Soft skills and hard skills

Authority and responsibility

Project Life Cycle

Agile (adaptive) vs. Waterfall (predictive) approach

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Projects are temporary and unique; operations are more continuous.

Project managers need “soft skills” and “hard skills” to be effective.

Project managers frequently have more responsibility than authority.

Projects go through predictable stages called a life cycle.

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Projects Versus Operations

Projects are temporary

Projects have routine and unique characteristics

Operations are ongoing work

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Operations consist of the ongoing work needed to ensure that an organization continues to function effectively

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Soft Skills and Hard Skills

Soft skills activities

Communication

Leadership

Conflict resolution

Hard skills activities

Risk analysis

Quality control

Scheduling work

Budgeting work

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A successful project manager needs both soft and hard skills along with the judgment of when each is more necessary.

Training, experience, and mentoring are instrumental in developing necessary skills.

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Authority and Responsibility

One person being assigned accountability

Project managers negotiate with functional managers

Strong communication and leadership skills to persuade subordinates

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Functional manager – “someone with management authority over an organizational unit.…the manager of any group that actually makes a product or performs a service.” PMBOK® Guide

Projects are most effectively managed with one person being assigned accountability

Project managers negotiate with functional managers

A project manager needs to develop strong communication and leadership skills to persuade subordinates to focus on the project when other work beckons.

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Project Life Cycle (PLC)

Project life cycles vary among different disciplines but generally are comprised of the same general stages

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Project life cycle – “the series of phases that a project goes through from its initiation to its closure.” PMBOK® Guide

Life cycle allows for control to assure that the project is proceeding in a satisfactory manner and that the results are likely to serve its customer’s intended purpose

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Project Life Cycle Stages

Selecting and initiating

Planning

Executing (includes monitoring/controlling)

Closing and realizing

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Selecting and initiating— a project is selected from an emerging idea, planned at a high level, and key participants commit to it in broad terms

Planning—starts after the initial commitment, includes detailed planning, and ends when all stakeholders accept the entire detailed plan.

Executing—includes authorizing, executing, monitoring, and controlling work until the customer accepts the project deliverables.

Closing and realizing—all activities after customer acceptance to ensure project is completed, lessons are learned, resources are reassigned, contributions are recognized, and benefits are realized.

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Project Life Cycle (PLC)

A project must gain approval to move from one stage to the next

Projects are measured at additional points

Selection

Progress reporting

Benefits realization

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Predictive (Plan-Driven) PLC

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Predictive extreme        waterfall

Product is well-understood

All planning precedes all executing

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Adaptive (Change-Driven) PLC

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Adaptive extreme        agile

Early results lead into planning later work

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Midland Insurance PLC for Quality Improvement Projects

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Understanding Projects

Project Management Institute (PMI)

Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK)

PMI Talent Triangle

Selecting and Prioritizing Projects

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Understanding Projects

Project Goals and Constraints

Defining Project Success and Failure

Using MS Project

Types of Projects

Scalability of Project Tools

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The Project Management Institute (PMI)

The largest professional organization

Produces A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide)

Talent Triangle—Technical PM, Leadership, & Strategic and Business Management

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Over 650,000 members and credential holders in 185 countries

Publishes and regularly updates A Guide to the Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK® Guide)

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The Project Management Institute (PMI)

Project Management Professional (PMP®) certification

Certified Associate in Project Management (CAPM) certification

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Project Management Body of Knowledge (PMBOK®)

Project Life Cycle

5 process groups

10 knowledge areas

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Project management process group – “a logical grouping of the project management inputs, tools and techniques, and outputs.” PMBOK® Guide

PMBOK® Process Groups

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Initiating— “define a project or a new phase by obtaining authorization”

Planning— “establish the project scope, refine objectives and define actions to attain objectives”

Executing— “complete the work defined to satisfy project specifications”

Monitoring and controlling— “track, review, and regulate progress and performance, identify changes required, and initiate changes”

Closing— “finalize all activities to formally close project of phase”

PMBOK®’s 10 Knowledge Areas

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Integration management - “processes and activities to identify, define, combine, unify, and coordinate the various processes and project management activities”

Scope management - “processes to ensure that the project includes all the work required, and only the work required, to complete the project successfully”

Schedule management - “processes to manage timely completion of the project”

PMBOK® Knowledge Areas

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Cost management – “processes involved in planning, estimating, budgeting, financing, funding, managing, and controlling costs so that the project can be completed within the approved budget”

Quality management - “processes and activities of the performing organization that determine quality policies, objectives, and responsibilities so that the project will satisfy the needs for which it was undertaken”

Resource management - “processes that organize, manage, and lead the project team”

PMBOK® Knowledge Areas

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Communications management - “processes to ensure timely and appropriate planning, collection, creation, distribution, storage, retrieval, management, control, monitoring, and ultimate disposition of project information”

Risk management - “processes of conducting risk management planning, identification, analysis, response planning, and control…to increase the likelihood and impact of positive events and decrease the likelihood and impact of negative events in the project”

PMBOK® Knowledge Areas

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Procurement management - “processes to purchase or acquire products, services, or results from outside the project team”

Stakeholder management - “processes to identify the people, groups, or organizations, that could impact or be impacted by the project, analyze their expectations and impact, and develop strategies for engaging them and managing conflicting interests”

Selecting and Prioritizing Projects

Identify potential projects

All parts of the organization are involved

Determine which projects align best with organizational goals

Organizational priorities:

Understood

Communicated

Accepted

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?

Selecting and Prioritizing Projects

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What value does each potential project bring to the organization?

Are the demands of performing each project understood?

Are the resources needed to perform the project available?

Is there enthusiastic support both from the external customers and from one or more internal champions?

Which projects will best help the organization achieve its goals?

Project Goals and Constraints

Projects are undertaken to accomplish specific goals

Scope and quality are performance goals

Subject to constraints of time and cost

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Scope – “the sum of the products, services, and results to be provided as a project.” PMBOK® Guide

Quality – “the degree to which a set of inherent characteristics fulfills requirements.” PMBOK® Guide

Scope and quality measure performance and should result in outputs that satisfy customers

Consider scope and quality subject to constraints of time and cost

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Project Goals and Constraints

Obstacles or challenges may limit ability to perform

Opportunities may allow projects to exceed original expectations.

Project Managers (PMs) decide which goals and constraints take precedence

Additional constraints

Amount of resources available

Decision maker’s risk tolerance

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Project Customer Tradeoff Matrix

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Break-out Session!

How do YOU define project success and failure?

What are some common reasons for project success or failure?

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Project Success and Failure

Deliverables include all agreed-upon features

Outputs please customers

Customers use the outputs effectively

Completed on schedule and on budget

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Project success is creating deliverables that include all of the agreed upon features

Outputs please the project’s customers.

Customers use the outputs effectively as they do their work (meet quality goals)

The project should be completed on schedule and on budget (meet time and cost constraints).

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Project Success and Failure

Completed without heroics

Learn new and/or refine skills

Organizational learning

Reap business-level benefits

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Successful projects are completed without heroics

People who work on the project should learn new skills and/or refine existing skills.

Organizational learning should take place and be captured for future projects.

Reap business-level benefits such as development of new products, increased market share, increased profitability, decreased cost, etc.

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Project Success

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Why Projects Fail

Insufficient resources and/or time

Unclear expectations

Changes in the scope not understood or agreed upon

Stakeholders disagree on expectations

Inadequate project planning

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Not enough resources are available for project completion.

Not enough time has been given to the project.

Project expectations are unclear.

Changes in the scope are not understood or agreed upon by all parties involved.

Stakeholders disagree regarding expectations for the project.

Adequate project planning is not used.

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Types of Projects

Classifying by industry

Classifying by size

Classifying by understanding of project scope

Classifying by application

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PMI Communities of Practice

Projects in different industries often have unique requirements

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Classifying by Size

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Large projects often require more detailed planning and control

Classifying by Timing of Project Scope Clarity

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How early in the project the project manager and team are able to determine the project scope

Classification by Application

All projects require planning and control

The art of project management:

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when to use certain techniques

how much detail to use

how to tailor techniques to the needs of a project.

Scalability of Project Tools

All projects require

Project specifications

Understanding of work involved

Budget and schedule determinations

Assignment of available workers to tasks

Project management

Projects are scaled up or down to meet the complexity of the task

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All projects require:

Determination of the wants and needs of the customer(s)

Understanding of the amount of work involved

Determination of a budget and schedule

Decisions about available workers and who will do which tasks

Management until the owner accepts the project results

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Traditional Project Roles

Project Executive-Level Roles

Project Management-Level Roles

Project Associate-Level Roles

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Project Executive-Level Roles

The steering team

The top leader (CEO) and his/her direct reports

Select, prioritize, and resource projects

Ensure that accurate progress is reported

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Select, prioritize, and resource projects in accordance with the organization’s strategic planning

Ensure that accurate progress is reported and necessary adjustments are made.

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Project Executive-Level Roles

Sponsor Active role:

Charter the project

Review progress reports

Sponsor Behind-the-scenes role:

Mentor the project manager

Assist the project manager

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Sponsor – “the person or group that provides resources and support for the project and is accountable for enabling success.” PMBOK® Guide

Project Executive-Level Roles

The chief projects officer or PMO

Supports project managers

Require compliance to project directives

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Project Management Office (PMO) – “an organizational structure that standardizes the project related governance processes and facilitates the sharing of resources, methodologies, tools and techniques.” PMBOK® Guide

Project Management-Level Roles

Project manager

Directly accountable for project results, schedule, and budget

The main communicator

Responsible for project planning and execution, from start to finish

Limited formal power

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Project manager – “the person assigned by the performing organization to lead the team that is responsible for achieving the project objectives.” PMBOK® Guide

Directly accountable for the project results, schedule, and budget

The main communicator

Responsible for the planning and execution of the project

Works on the project from start to finish.

The project manager often must get things done through the power of influence since his or her formal power may be limited.

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Functional manager

Department heads

Determine the “how” of project work

Supervise the work

Negotiate with the project manager

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Project Management-Level Roles

The department heads—the ongoing managers of the organization

Determine how the work of the project is to be accomplished

Supervise the work

Negotiate with the project manager regarding which workers are assigned to the project

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Facilitator

Helps the project manager with the process of running meetings and making decisions

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Project Management-Level Roles

Project Associate-Level Roles

Project management team

Core team members—part of team throughout

Subject matter experts (SMEs)—only involved in part of project; not involved in most planning and decision making

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Project management team – “members who are directly involved in project management activities.” PMBOK® Guide

Temporary team members, called subject matter experts are used on an as-needed basis

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Agile Project Roles

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Project Executive-Level Roles

The senior customer representative

Identifies and prioritizes constituents requirements

Ensures project progress support customer desires

Continuous and active role

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Scrum Master

Project manager who serves and leads as:

Collaborator

Facilitator

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Project Management-Level Roles

Break-out Session!

In your own words, what are the main differences between adaptive (Agile) and predictive (Waterfall) approaches to Project Management?

What are some pros and cons of each approach?

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Overview of the Book

Project management is integrative, iterative, and collaborative

This book has four major parts

Organizing and Initiating Projects

Leading Projects

Planning Projects

Performing Projects

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Project management is integrative since it consists of the 10 knowledge areas and the 5 process groups described

in the PMBOK® Guide, and one must integrate all of them into one coherent and ethical

whole.

Project management is iterative in that one starts by planning at a high level and then repeats the planning in greater detail as more information becomes available and the date for the work performance approaches.

Project management is collaborative since there are many stakeholders to be satisfied and a team of workers with various skills and ideas who need to work together to plan and complete the project.

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Part I - Organizing and Initiating Projects

Intro to Project Management (Chapter 1)

Project Selection and Prioritization (Chapter 2)

Chartering Projects (Chapter 3)

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Project charter – “a document issued by the project initiator or sponsor that formally authorizes the existence of a project, and provides the project manager with the authority to apply organizational resources to project activities.” PMBOK® Guide

Part II – Leading Projects

Organizational structure & culture, project life cycle, and project management roles of the parent organization (Chapter 4)

Project team (Chapter 5)

Project stakeholders (Chapter 6)

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Part II – Planning Projects

Scheduling projects (Chapter 7)

Scheduling resources on projects (Chapter 8)

Project budgeting (Chapter 9)

Risk planning (Chapter 10)

Project Quality (Chapter 11)

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

Project schedule – “presents linked activities with planned dates, durations, milestones and resources.” PMBOK® Guide

Budget – “the approved estimate for the project or any work breakdown structure component or any schedule activity.” PMBOK® Guide

Part III – Planning Projects

Scope Planning (Chapter 7)

Scheduling Projects (Chapter 8)

Resourcing Projects (Chapter 9)

Budgeting Projects (Chapter 10)

Project Risk Planning (Chapter 11)

Project Quality Planning and Kick-off (Chapter 12)

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

Part IV—Performing Projects

Project Supply Chain Management (Chapter 13)

Determining Project Progress and Results (Chapter 14)

Finishing Projects and Realizing the Benefits (Chapter 15)

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

© 2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

Summary

A project is an organized set of work efforts

Tradeoffs must be made between the scope, quality, cost, and schedule

Projects need to be planned and managed.

PMI® is a large professional organization devoted to promoting and standardizing project management understanding and methods

Project management requires an understanding of the various executive, managerial, and associate roles in project management

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

A project is an organized set of work efforts undertaken to produce a unique output subject to limitations of time and resources such as money and people

Project management includes work processes that initiate, plan, execute, control, and close project work.

Tradeoffs must be made between the scope, quality, cost, and schedule

All projects, regardless of size, complexity, or application, need to be planned and managed.

PMI® is a large professional organization devoted to promoting and standardizing project management understanding and methods

64

Summary

PMBOK® Guide

Five process groups: initiating, planning, executing, monitoring and controlling, and closing

Ten knowledge areas: cost, schedule, scope, quality, risk, communications, resource, stakeholder, procurement, and integration.

Projects require an understanding of what project success is

Projects require an understanding of the causes of project failure

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

What is Appreciative Inquiry?

Tool for engaging project stakeholders

Recognizes the power of the whole and builds on conversational learning

Change is based on inquiry

What has worked in the past?

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

PM IN ACTION

Implications of AI on Defining Project Scope

Tool for navigating through inquiries via positive conversations

Discovery – storytelling to collectively discover process selection and prioritization

Dreaming – dream a perfect, desirable state for the stakeholders

Designing – what would the project look like if there were no resource constraints

Delivery – “sustain the design from the dream that is discovered”

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

PM IN ACTION

Key Outcome

AI is an effective way to address ambiguity and uncertainty in PM

Elicit and articulate expectations

Better understanding of desirable future state

Commitment is clearly articulated

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.

PM IN ACTION

PMBOK Exams

Everything in this textbook is consistent with PMBOK’s most recent, 6th edition

PMP (Project Management Professional) certification—200 questions

CAPM (Certified Associate of Project Management) certification—150 questions

More info at www.pmi.org/certifications/types

© 2019 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as permitted in a license distributed with a certain product or service or otherwise on a password-protected website for classroom use.