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Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition Note: See the text itself for full citations.

Scope refers to all the work involved in creating the products of the project and the processes used to create them A deliverable is a product produced as part of a project, such as hardware or software, planning documents, or meeting minutes Project scope management includes the processes involved in defining and controlling what is or is not included in a project Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 2

Planning scope: determining how the project s scope and requirements will be managed Collecting requirements: defining and documenting the features and functions of the products produced during the project as well as the processes used for creating them Defining scope: reviewing the project charter, requirements documents, and organizational process assets to create a scope statement Creating the WBS: subdividing the major project deliverables into smaller, more manageable components Validating scope: formalizing acceptance of the project deliverables Controlling scope: controlling changes to project scope throughout the life of the project Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 3

The project team uses expert judgment and meetings to develop two important outputs: the scope management plan and the requirements management plan The scope management plan is a subsidiary part of the project management plan Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 4

How to prepare a detailed project scope statement How to create a WBS How to maintain and approve the WBS How to obtain formal acceptance of the completed project deliverables How to control requests for changes to the project scope Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 5

The PMBOK Guide, Fifth Edition, describes requirements as conditions or capabilities that must be met by the project or present in the product, service, or result to satisfy an agreement or other formally imposed specification The requirements management plan documents how project requirements will be analyzed, documented, and managed Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 6

For some IT projects, it is helpful to divide requirements development into categories called elicitation, analysis, specification, and validation It is important to use an iterative approach to defining requirements since they are often unclear early in a project Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 7

Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 8

Interviewing Focus groups and facilitated workshops Using group creativity and decision-making techniques Questionnaires and surveys Observation Prototyping Benchmarking, or generating ideas by comparing specific project practices or product characteristics to those of other projects or products inside or outside the performing organization, can also be used to collect requirements Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 9

Eighty-eight percent of the software projects involved enhancing existing products instead of creating new ones Eighty-six percent of respondents said that customer satisfaction was the most important metric for measuring the success of development projects Eighty-three percent of software development teams still use Microsoft Office applications such as Word and Excel as their main tools to communicate requirements *John Simpson, 2011: The State of Requirements Management (2011). Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 10

Project scope statements should include at least a product scope description, product user acceptance criteria, and detailed information on all project deliverables. It is also helpful to document other scope-related information, such as the project boundaries, constraints, and assumptions. The project scope statement should also reference supporting documents, such as product specifications As time progresses, the scope of a project should become more clear and specific Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 11

Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 12

Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 13

A WBS is a deliverable-oriented grouping of the work involved in a project that defines the total scope of the project WBS is a foundation document that provides the basis for planning and managing project schedules, costs, resources, and changes Decomposition is subdividing project deliverables into smaller pieces A work package is a task at the lowest level of the WBS The scope baseline includes the approved project scope statement and its associated WBS and WBS dictionary Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 14

Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 15

Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 16

Using guidelines: Some organizations, like the DOD, provide guidelines for preparing WBSs The analogy approach: Review WBSs of similar projects and tailor to your project The top-down approach: Start with the largest items of the project and break them down The bottom-up approach: Start with the specific tasks and roll them up Mind-mapping approach: Mind mapping is a technique that uses branches radiating out from a core idea to structure thoughts and ideas Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 17

Many WBS tasks are vague and must be explained more so people know what to do and can estimate how long it will take and what it will cost to do the work A WBS dictionary is a document that describes detailed information about each WBS item Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 18

A unit of work should appear at only one place in the WBS. The work content of a WBS item is the sum of the WBS items below it A WBS item is the responsibility of only one individual, even though many people may be working on it The WBS must be consistent with the way in which work is actually going to be performed; it should serve the project team first, and other purposes only if practical Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 19

Project team members should be involved in developing the WBS to ensure consistency and buy-in Each WBS item must be documented in a WBS dictionary to ensure accurate understanding of the scope of work included and not included in that item The WBS must be a flexible tool to accommodate inevitable changes while properly maintaining control of the work content in the project according to the scope statement Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 20

It is very difficult to create a good scope statement and WBS for a project It is even more difficult to verify project scope and minimize scope changes Scope validation involves formal acceptance of the completed project deliverables Acceptance is often achieved by a customer inspection and then sign-off on key deliverables Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 21

Scope control involves controlling changes to the project scope Goals of scope control are to influence the factors that cause scope changes assure changes are processed according to procedures developed as part of integrated change control, and manage changes when they occur Variance is the difference between planned and actual performance Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 22

1. Keep the scope realistic. Don t make projects so large that they can t be completed. Break large projects down into a series of smaller ones 2. Involve users in project scope management. Assign key users to the project team and give them ownership of requirements definition and scope verification 3. Use off-the-shelf hardware and software whenever possible. Many IT people enjoy using the latest and greatest technology, but business needs, not technology trends, must take priority 4. Follow good project management processes. As described in this chapter and others, there are well-defined processes for managing project scope and others aspects of projects Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 23

Develop and follow a requirements management process Use techniques such as prototyping, use case modeling, and JAD to get more user involvement Put requirements in writing and keep them current Create a requirements management database for documenting and controlling requirements Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 24

Provide adequate testing and conduct testing throughout the project life cycle Review changes from a systems perspective Emphasize completion dates to help focus on what s most important Allocate resources specifically for handling change requests/enhancements like NWA did with ResNet Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition 25

Information Technology Project Management, Seventh Edition Note: See the text itself for full citations.

Managers often cite delivering projects on time as one of their biggest challenges Time has the least amount of flexibility; it passes no matter what happens on a project Schedule issues are the main reason for conflicts on projects, especially during the second half of projects 27

Planning schedule management: determining the policies, procedures, and documentation that will be used for planning, executing, and controlling the project schedule Defining activities: identifying the specific activities that the project team members and stakeholders must perform to produce the project deliverables Sequencing activities: identifying and documenting the relationships between project activities Estimating activity resources: estimating how many resources a project team should use to perform project activities Estimating activity durations: estimating the number of work periods that are needed to complete individual activities Developing the schedule: analyzing activity sequences, activity resource estimates, and activity duration estimates to create the project schedule Controlling the schedule: controlling and managing changes to the project schedule 28

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An activity or task is an element of work normally found on the work breakdown structure (WBS) that has an expected duration, a cost, and resource requirements Activity definition involves developing a more detailed WBS and supporting explanations to understand all the work to be done so you can develop realistic cost and duration estimates 30

An activity list is a tabulation of activities to be included on a project schedule that includes the activity name an activity identifier or number a brief description of the activity Activity attributes provide more information such as predecessors, successors, logical relationships, leads and lags, resource requirements, constraints, imposed dates, and assumptions related to the activity 31

A milestone is a significant event that normally has no duration It often takes several activities and a lot of work to complete a milestone They re useful tools for setting schedule goals and monitoring progress Examples include obtaining customer sign-off on key documents or completion of specific products 32

Involves reviewing activities and determining dependencies A dependency or relationship is the sequencing of project activities or tasks You must determine dependencies in order to use critical path analysis 33

Mandatory dependencies: inherent in the nature of the work being performed on a project, sometimes referred to as hard logic Discretionary dependencies: defined by the project team., sometimes referred to as soft logic and should be used with care since they may limit later scheduling options External dependencies: involve relationships between project and non-project activities 34

Network diagrams are the preferred technique for showing activity sequencing A network diagram is a schematic display of the logical relationships among, or sequencing of, project activities Two main formats are the arrow and precedence diagramming methods 35

36

Also called activity-on-arrow (AOA) network diagrams Activities are represented by arrows Nodes or circles are the starting and ending points of activities Can only show finish-to-start dependencies 37

Activities are represented by boxes Arrows show relationships between activities More popular than ADM method and used by project management software Better at showing different types of dependencies 38

39

A task must finish before the next can start Predecessor Successor Activity A Activity B O G Activity B Successor with gap Activity B Successor with overlap 40

A task must finish before the next can finish Predecessor Activity A Successor Activity B Successor with overlap Activity B O G 4 1 Successor with gap Activity B 41

A task must start before the next can start O Activity A Activity B G Predecessor Successor Successor with gap Activity B Successor with overlap Activity B 42

A task must start before the next can finish Successor Activity B Predecessor Activity A G Successor with overlap Activity B O Successor with gap Activity B 43

3 1 2 5 6 7 8 9 4 Networks flow from left to right Activities can't begin until all preceding, connected activities complete Arrows on networks indicate precedence and flow Each activity should have a unique ID number 44

3 1 2 5 6 7 8 9 4 Activity number must be larger than those preceding it Looping not allowed Conditional statements not allowed; e.g., if, then, else Should be a clear start point and end point 45

1 5 3 1 2 5 6 7 8 9 2 4 2 2 2 2 3 3 3 2 46 LEGEND: (TIME = WEEKS) EVENT ACTIVITY CRITICAL PATH ACTIVITY

1 1 2 5 6 7 8 9 47 5 2 3 4 2 2 2 2 3 3 LEGEND: (TIME = WEEKS) 3 EVENT ACTIVITY CRITICAL PATH ACTIVITY 2 13 18 15 8

Before estimating activity durations, you must have a good idea of the quantity and type of resources that will be assigned to each activity; resources are people, equipment, and materials Consider important issues in estimating resources How difficult will it be to do specific activities on this project? What is the organization s history in doing similar activities? Are the required resources available? A resource breakdown structure is a hierarchical structure that identifies the project s resources by category and type 48

Duration includes the actual amount of time worked on an activity plus elapsed time Effort is the number of workdays or work hours required to complete a task Effort does not normally equal duration People doing the work should help create estimates, and an expert should review them 49

Instead of providing activity estimates as a discrete number, such as four weeks, it s often helpful to create a three-point estimate an estimate that includes an optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic estimate, such as three weeks for the optimistic, four weeks for the most likely, and five weeks for the pessimistic estimate Three-point estimates are needed for PERT and Monte Carlo simulations 50

Uses results of the other time management processes to determine the start and end date of the project Ultimate goal is to create a realistic project schedule that provides a basis for monitoring project progress for the time dimension of the project Important tools and techniques include Gantt charts, critical path analysis, and critical chain scheduling, and PERT analysis 51

Gantt charts provide a standard format for displaying project schedule information by listing project activities and their corresponding start and finish dates in a calendar format Symbols include: A black diamond: a milestones Thick black bars: summary tasks Lighter horizontal bars: durations of tasks Arrows: dependencies between tasks 52

53

Many people like to focus on meeting milestones, especially for large projects Milestones emphasize important events or accomplishments on projects Normally create milestone by entering tasks with a zero duration, or you can mark any task as a milestone 54

Schedule risk is inherent in the development of complex systems. Luc Richard, the founder of www.projectmangler.com, suggests that project managers can reduce schedule risk through project milestones, a best practice that involves identifying and tracking significant points or achievements in the project. The five key points of using project milestones include the following: 1. Define milestones early in the project and include them in the Gantt chart to provide a visual guide 2. Keep milestones small and frequent 3. The set of milestones must be all-encompassing 4. Each milestone must be binary, meaning it is either complete or incomplete. 5. Carefully monitor the critical path 55

CPM is a network diagramming technique used to predict total project duration A critical path for a project is the series of activities that determines the earliest time by which the project can be completed The critical path is the longest path through the network diagram and has the least amount of slack or float Slack or float is the amount of time an activity may be delayed without delaying a succeeding activity or the project finish date 56

First develop a good network diagram Add the duration estimates for all activities on each path through the network diagram The longest path is the critical path If one or more of the activities on the critical path takes longer than planned, the whole project schedule will slip unless the project manager takes corrective action 57

58

A project team at Apple computer put a stuffed gorilla on the top of the cubicle of the person currently managing critical task The critical path is not the one with all the critical activities; it only accounts for time Remember the example of growing grass being on the critical path for Disney s Animal Kingdom There can be more than one critical path if the lengths of two or more paths are the same The critical path can change as the project progresses 59

Free slack or free float is the amount of time an activity can be delayed without delaying the early start of any immediately following activities Total slack or total float is the amount of time an activity may be delayed from its early start without delaying the planned project finish date A forward pass through the network diagram determines the early start and finish dates A backward pass determines the late start and finish dates 60

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The calculation is performed for each activity in two passes through the entire network diagram for each path. The first pass through starts at the begin node and moves to the end node through each path calculating the ES and EF. The second pass through starts at the end node and moves to the beginning node through each path calculating LS an LF Those activities with zero slack are typically on the critical path 62

T E = 3 T L = 3 3 2 3 T E = 6 T L = 9 4 12 T E = 0 T L = 0 1 7 6 T E = 15 T L = 15 15 2 3 5 T E = 2 T L = 5 T E = 10 T L = 10 5 5 6 12 63

Earliest times: (Forward Pass) ES = How soon can an activity start? EF = How soon can an activity finish? Latest times: (Backward pass) LS = How late can an activity start? LF = How late can an activity finish? SL = How long can an activity be delayed? 64

Slack time: difference between latest allowable date and earliest expected date T E = earliest time (date) expected for an event T L = latest date an event can take place without extending completion date of the project Slack time = T L - T E 65

Activity Identification Earliest Start Time Earliest Finish Time C (8, 10) 2 (15, 17) Activity Time Latest Finish Time Latest Start Time 66

22 21 A (0, 6) 6 (0, 6) C (6, 11) 5 (14, 19) I (18, 21) 3 (19, 22) 14 17 16 67

Elimination of some parts of the project Addition of more resources Substitution of less time-consuming components or activities Parallelization of activities Shortening critical path activities Shortening early activities Shortening longest activities 68

Three main techniques for shortening schedules Shortening durations of critical activities/tasks by adding more resources or changing their scope Crashing activities by obtaining the greatest amount of schedule compression for the least incremental cost Fast tracking activities by doing them in parallel or overlapping them 69

Cost and schedule tradeoffs Adding resources or material to reduce the scheduled duration of an activity Crash only when necessary and crash lowest cost activity first if possible Do not change the critical path! Crashing Almost Always Results In Added Direct Cost 70

Normal Duration Critical Information A 3,2,$500 Added Cost per Day Accelerated Duration A B 3,2,$500 5,4,$30 4,2,$50 9,7,$100 2,2,$0 C F 5,3,$100 5,3,$150 D 12,10,400 E G H 22 23 24 Example GOAL = Reduce Total project duration 71

Crash Example Step 1 Activity Days Cost Cum/Cost Days Saved A 3 => 2 500 500 1 D 12,10,400 22 21 A B 3,2,$500 5,4,$30 4,2,$50 9,7,$100 2,2,$0 C E G H F 5,3,$100 5,3,$150 23 22 24 23 72

Crash Example Step 2 Activity Days Cost Cum/Cost Days Saved A 3 => 2 500 500 1 C 5 => 4 100 600 2 D 12,10,400 22 21 A B E G H 3,2,$500 5,4,$30 4,2,$50 9,7,$100 2,2,$0 23 22 C 5,3,$100 4 F 5,3,$150 24 23 22 73

Crash Example Step 3 Activity Days Cost Cum/Cost Days Saved A 3 => 2 500 500 1 C 5 => 4 100 600 2 G 9 => 8 100 700 3 A B D 3,2,$500 5,4,$30 4,2,$50 9,7,$100 2,2,$0 8 C 5,3,$100 4 E G H F 5,3,$150 12,10,400 22 21 23 22 21 24 23 22 21 74

75 Crash Example Step 4 Activity Days Cost Cum/Cost Days Saved A 3 => 2 500 500 1 C 5 => 4 100 600 2 G 9 => 8 100 700 3 B 5 => 4 30 C 4 => 3 100 830 4 D 12,10,400 22 21 20 A B 3,2,$500 5,4,$30 4,2,$50 9,7,$100 2,2,$0 C 5,3,$100 4 E G H F 5,3,$150 8 23 22 21 20 24 23 22 21 20

Crash Example Step 5 Activity Days Cost Subtotal Cum/Cost Days Saved A 3 => 2 500 500 500 1 C 5 => 4 100 100 600 2 G 9 => 8 100 100 700 3 B 5 => 4 30 C 4 => 3 100 130 830 4 A B 3,2,$500 5,4,$30 4,2,$50 9,7,$100 2,2,$0 C 5,3,$100 4 G 8 => 7 100 D 12 =>11 400 500 1330 5 F D E G H 5,3,$150 12,10,400 11 20 19 20 19 8 20 19 76

Crash Example Solution A B D 3,2,$500 5,4,$30 4,2,$50 9,7,$100 C 5,3,$100 4 Activity Days Cost Subtotal Cum/Cost Days Saved A 3 =>2 500 500 500 1 C 5 =>4 100 100 600 2 G 9 =>8 100 100 700 3 B 5 =>4 30 C 4 =>3 100 130 830 4 G 8 =>7 100 D 12=>11 400 500 1330 5 D 11=>10 400 E 4=>3 50 F 5=>4 150 12,10,400 600 1930 6 19 18 11 3 E G H F 5,3,$150 4 8 2,2,$0 19 18 19 18 77

E 11,9,1500 A 3,2,500 B C D 5,3,200 7,5,1500 3,2,500 5,5,0 Scenario: You need to crash the above network of activities to the maximum extent possible. Step 1: ID the critical path Step 2: Select activities to reduce duration and note the change to each path s duration Step 3: Stop when you can t crash any further F 78

E 9 11,9,1500 17 13 A 3,2,500 B C F Activity Days Cost Cum/Cost Days Cum/Days Saved A 3 => 2 500 500 1 D 5,3,200 7,5,1500 3,2,500 2 3 6 2 5,5,0 18 13 B 5 => 4 200 700 1 2 13 10 B 4 => 3 200 E 11=>10 1500 2400 1 3 C 7 => 6 1500 E 10=>9 1500 5400 1 4 D 3 => 2 500 5900 1 5 Days saved = 5 Total Cost = 5900

It is important to update project schedule information to meet time goals for a project The critical path may change as you enter actual start and finish dates If you know the project completion date will slip, negotiate with the project sponsor 80

PERT is a network analysis technique used to estimate project duration when there is a high degree of uncertainty about the individual activity duration estimates PERT uses probabilistic time estimates duration estimates based on using optimistic, most likely, and pessimistic estimates of activity durations, or a threepoint estimate 81

PERT weighted average = optimistic time + 4X most likely time + pessimistic time 6 Example: PERT weighted average = 8 workdays + 4 X 10 workdays + 24 workdays = 12 days 6 where optimistic time= 8 days most likely time = 10 days, and pessimistic time = 24 days Therefore, you d use 12 days on the network diagram instead of 10 when using PERT for the above example 82

Activity O M P Expected Duration Standard Deviation Range of estimates A 14 27 47 28.167 5.5 22.667 to 33.667 or (28.17 +- 5.5) B 41 60 89 61.67 8 53.67 69.67 C 39 44 48 43.83 1.5 42.33 45.33 8 3

Perform reality checks on schedules Allow for contingencies Don t plan for everyone to work at 100% capacity all the time Hold progress meetings with stakeholders and be clear and honest in communicating schedule issues 84

Goals are to know the status of the schedule, influence factors that cause schedule changes, determine that the schedule has changed, and manage changes when they occur Tools and techniques include Progress reports A schedule change control system Project management software, including schedule comparison charts like the tracking Gantt chart Variance analysis, such as analyzing float or slack Performance management, such as earned value (chapter 7) 85

First review the draft schedule or estimated completion date in the project charter Prepare a more detailed schedule with the project team Make sure the schedule is realistic and followed Alert top management well in advance if there are schedule problems 86

Strong leadership helps projects succeed more than good PERT charts Project managers should use empowerment incentives discipline negotiation 87

Many people misuse project management software because they don t understand important concepts and have not had training You must enter dependencies to have dates adjust automatically and to determine the critical path You must enter actual schedule information to compare planned and actual progress 88

ITM-5200, Week-2 Fall I, 2014 Class Project 8 9