Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model - a Guide to Improving Performance



Similar documents
PORTFOLIO, PROGRAMME & PROJECT MANAGEMENT MATURITY MODEL (P3M3)

Benefits of conducting a Project Management Maturity Assessment with PM Academy:

Maturity Model. March Version 1.0. P2MM Version 1.0 The OGC logo is a Registered Trade Mark of the Office of Government Commerce

DCA metrics for the approval of Auditing Firms for Certifications Scheme VERSION 1.0

Association for Project Management Business Management System

UoD IT Job Description

Project Management Certification Options within Australia

Contents. 2. Why use a Project Management methodology?

Frameworks for IT Management

ITIL Service Lifecycles and the Project Manager

PRINCE2, the PMBOK Guide and ISO 21500:2012. Klas Skogmar. AXELOS.com

MEASURES FOR EXCELLENCE. Software Process Improvement: Management. Commitment, Measures. And Motivation

Agile Project Management White Paper

PROCESS IMPROVEMENT CAPABILITY MATURITY MODEL

Organisational Change Management Maturity

Australian Computer Society. Policy Statement

CSL classroom courses that will be offered up to June 2016 (unless marked otherwise)

Demonstrate and apply knowledge of project management in

IBM and the IT Infrastructure Library.

The Rehabilitation Hospital at King Fahad Medical City

Specialist Cloud Services Lot 4 Cloud EDRM Consultancy Services

The ITIL v.3 Foundation Examination

ITIL & The Service Oriented Approach. Vivek Shrivastava

PRINCE2 Introduction PRINCE2 Introduction

The Asset Management Landscape

Procurement Programmes & Projects P3M3 v2.1 Self-Assessment Instructions and Questionnaire. P3M3 Project Management Self-Assessment

Director Global IT Service Delivery Information Services

CASE STUDY: Land Registry SECTOR: Government Land Registry win itsmf Service Management Team of the Year Award

Comparing the Differences and Complementary features of PRINCE2 and the PMI PMBOK Guide

Making A Case For Project Management

Project, Programme and Portfolio Management Delivery Plan 6

Delivering e-procurement Local e-gov National e-procurement Project Overarching Guide to e-procurement for LEAs

ICT Indicators. The scope of the ICT function covers all aspects of infrastructure, systems, processes and disciplines required to support:

3 Keys to Preparing for CRM Success: Avoid the Pitfalls and Follow Best Practices

Criticism of Implementation of ITSM & ISO20000 in IT Banking Industry. Presented by: Agus Sutiawan, MIT, CISA, CISM, ITIL, BSMR3

Cisco IT Technology Tutorial Overview of ITIL at Cisco

Senior Project Manager (Web Content Management)

The Future of Best Practices in IT Service Management - ITIL Version 3 Explained

Volunteer Managers National Occupational Standards

Specialist Cloud Services Lot 4 Cloud Printing and Imaging Consultancy Services

Can Complement PMBOK and Your PMP

White Paper: AlfaPeople ITSM This whitepaper discusses how ITIL 3.0 can benefit your business.

How are companies currently changing their facilities management delivery model...?

Diploma In Coaching For High Performance & Business Improvement

ANZSIGINSIGHT. A Critical Assessment of P3M3 in Australian Federal Government Agencies. Project, Programme and Portfolio Maturity Levels

ITIL: What is it? How does ITIL link to COBIT and ISO 17799?

Application Value Assessment

{Add company name} {Add geographical location} {Add/edit as required} Programme manager. {Add local information}

A world of HR at your fingertips

Program Lifecycle Methodology Version 1.7

ITIL Introducing continual service improvement

Good Practice Framework. Performance Management

Project and Programme Management Capability Improvement Study

The NHS Knowledge and Skills Framework (NHS KSF) and the Development Review Process

Tutorial: Towards better managed Grids. IT Service Management best practices based on ITIL

PRINCE2 and governance

Change Management Professional Horizons for Success. The Enabling Change SIG. Robert Cole Hannah Melville Mark Hamlyn

Executive Development Workshop. A Systems Approach to Inventory Management

Certified Change Management Professional (CCMP )

Nydia González 1, Franck Marle 1 and Jean-Claude Bocquet 1. Ecole Centrale Paris, FRANCE

HKITPC Competency Definition

Improving Organizational Project Management Maturity A Siemens Case Study

Quality Systems Frameworks. SE 350 Software Process & Product Quality 1

NATIONAL COMPETENCY STANDARDS FOR QUANTITY SURVEYORS - CONSTRUCTION ECONOMISTS

Annexure A 2015/16. Performance Plan. Director: Community Services - 1 -

Software Engineering: Analysis and Design - CSE3308

Driving Supplier Performance Improvement:

Digital Marketing Institute s. Professional Diploma in Digital Selling. Validated by the Syllabus Advisory Council (SAC)

Description of Program Management Processes (Initiating, Planning) 2011 PROGstudy.com. All rights reserved

D-G4-L4-126 Police contact management and demand reduction review Deloitte LLP Service for G-Cloud IV

Customer Relationship Management

ISO20000: What it is and how it relates to ITIL v3

The MBA has long been the degree of choice

Welcome to the Eastwood Harris Pty Ltd Introduction to PRINCE2 TM Revised 2009 and Microsoft Office Project. Page 1

The MBA has long been the degree of choice

Brand metrics: Gauging and linking brands with business performance

ACCREDITATION. APM Corporate CASE STUDY

Contents. viii. 4 Service Design processes 57. List of figures. List of tables. OGC s foreword. Chief Architect s foreword. Preface.

How To Implement Itil V3

Shropshire Highways Draft Asset Management and Communications Strategy and Implications of Department for Transport Incentivised funding

January Brand and Campaigns Executive: Information for Candidates

Delivering progress towards meeting HMG targets on the SME growth agenda

Bhattacharya Uttam, Rahut Amit Kumar, De Sujoy

PRCA Communications Management Standard (CMS) for In-House Teams

PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT TRAINING

SAP Solutions Analyst (Finance and Payroll)

BS OHSAS Occupational Health and Safety Management It s your duty. Your implementation guide

Microsoft Enterprise Project Management. James Wright Christopher Pond

Skatteudvalget (2. samling) SAU Alm.del Bilag 48 Offentligt. Programme, Project & Service Management Analysis

How To Improve Your Business Recipe Cards

Network Rail Infrastructure Projects Joint Relationship Management Plan

Process Improvement. Objectives

IT Project Management

Water-Scrum-Fall Agile Reality for Large Organisations. By Manav Mehan Principal Agile consultant

Performance Management Checklist 180

1. What is PRINCE2? Projects In a Controlled Environment. Structured project management method. Generic based on proven principles

The six digital imperatives. Moving your organisation towards Digital Excellence (and how we can help)

Head of CIO Office Information Services

Transcription:

Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model - a Guide to Improving Performance By Andy Murray Improving Performance Using Maturity Models The 1990's saw a dramatic increase in the number of people with the job title Project Manager as organisations addressed the problem of an ever changing world through Managing by Projects. Many organisations adopted the PRINCE2 method as a means to gain some consistency of project management approach across their now swelling ranks of project managers. With both an increasing need for Project Managers and an increasing number of people claiming to be Project Managers, many organisations based their recruitment and development strategies on certification of project management competence. Having a PRINCE2 Practitioner certificate became an indication of competence (even though it is only an indicator of knowledge). Experience has shown that successful implementation of a project management method requires more than just training your project managers. A successful organisation requires processes, technology, policies and standards for project management - which also need to be integrated with other management systems for them to work effectively and efficiently. In the absence of an organisation wide project infrastructure, project results depend entirely on the availability of certain high performing individuals. This does not necessarily provide the basis for long-term or consistent project performance. However, such infrastructure doesn't establish itself overnight. It may take several years; it may take a programme of change to institutionalise. Therefore it is not surprising that the more advanced organisations are now asking themselves, "Where have we got to and what more do we need to do?" This is where maturity modelling can help. Project and programme management maturity models describe the project and programme related activities within Key Process Areas (KPAs) that contribute to achieving successful outcomes. A good model, such as the OGC's P3M3, recognises not only the project management activities being carried out at the individual project level, but also those ac tivities within an organisation that build and maintain a programme and project infrastructure of effective project approaches and management practices. By undertaking a maturity assessment against an industry standard model, such as P3M3, an organisation will be able to verify what they have achieved, where their strengths and weaknesses are, and then identify a prioritised action plan to take them to an improved level of capability. What Are Maturity Models? "A maturity model is a structured collection of elements that describe characteristics of effective processes. A maturity model provides: Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model 1

A place to start The benefit of a community's prior experiences A common language and a shared vision A framework for prioritizing actions A way to define what improvement means for your organisation A maturity model can be used as a benchmark for assessing different organisations for equivalent comparison."- Wikipedia The Software Engineering Institute (SEI) developed the first Capability Maturity Model (CMM ) back in the 1980s. This was a result of research that indicated the quality of software applications were directly related to the quality of the processes used to develop them. CMM was originally intended as a government tool to evaluate the ability of contractors to deliver a software project. Though it originates from the software development industry it is widely used as a general model of the maturity of processes (e.g. Project and Programme Management). Maturity models have five levels: 1. Initial (chaotic, ad hoc, heroic) - the starting point for use of a new process. 2. Repeatable (process discipline) - the process is used repeatedly. 3. Defined (institutionalised) - the process is defined/confirmed as a standard business process. 4. Managed (quantified) - process management and measurement takes place. 5. Optimising (process improvement) - deliberate process optimisation/improvement. Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model (P3M3) The Office of Government Commerce (OGC) is a department within the UK Government with a remit to help public sector organisations improve their efficiency, gain better value for money from procurements and deliver improved success from programmes and projects. They are the owners of PRINCE2, Managing Successful Programmes (MSP), Management of Risk (M_o_R ) and the IT best practice framework, ITIL. In 2003 the OGC released their first draft of a Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model (P3M3). The model was refined and formally published in February 2006 after incorporating latest maturity modelling practices and after consultation with interested consultants, practitioners and their accreditation partner APM Group. The P3M3 describes the portfolio, programme and project-related activities within process areas that contribute to achieving a successful project outcome. The levels described within the P3M3 indicate how key process areas can be structured hierarchically to define a progression of capability which an organisation can use to set goals and plan their improvement journey. The levels facilitate organisational transitions from an immature state to become a mature and capable organisation with an objective basis for judging quality and solving programme and proj ect issues. The distinct yet connected disciplines of portfolio, programme and project management are nested within the P3M3 model: Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model 2

Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity (P3M3) Programme and Project Management Maturity (P2M3) Project Management Maturity (P1M3) This means that organisations can use the model to evolve their maturity across all disciplines in an integrated approach or by addressing Project Management then Programme Management and then Portfolio Management in sequence. Using Maturity Models for Performance Improvement The beauty of maturity models is that they enable organisations to breakdown a broad process improvement goal into manageable tasks. The lower level KPAs need to be in place for the higher level KPAs to be effective. Therefore the lower level KPAs should be addressed first. Step 1 - Where Are You Today? In order to identify a prioritised roadmap for process improvement it is important to understand what KPAs you currently do well and what KPAs are causing you performance issues. Maturity modelling applies the concept that there's little point in fixing things that are not broken or that are not causing problems. Additionally, for large organisations it is likely that you have islands of good practice. What is it that department X does differently to department Y or Z? It may be that you have many of the KPAs covered but not universally across the organisation. Adopting good practice from within your own organisation can significantly accelerate adoption rates and hence performance improvement. The best way to understand current capability is to conduct a baseline assessment against the maturity model through a process of inspection and structured interviews. Step 2 - Where Do You Want To Be? Not all organisations need to be at Level 5 maturity. The ideal maturity level for an organisation will depend on how important programmes and projects are to their overall performance. If you are a R&D organisation, say developing aerospace technology for governments, then your organisation's performance is likely to be highly dependent on your programme and project management capability. If you are a retailer by contrast then your organisation's overall performance is likely to be less dependent on programme and project management capability. The output from Step 1 will help identify some realistic goals. For example, there are 13 KPAs that need to be addressed to get to level 2 maturity. If the initial assessment has shown that 8 of the 13 are ok then a realistic goal would be to change the 5 weak KPAs to strong KPAs within 6 months to consolidate at level 2 before addressing how to get to level 3. With an estimated 90% of organisations operating at Level 1 or Level 2 maturity, setting targets by the quantity of strong KPAs is more inspiring than aiming to be level 2 of 5 in capability. For example "We will be in the top 10% of corporate organisations by achieving a strong capability in 25 Key Process Areas" Step 3 - How Will You Get There Experience has shown that it takes between 3 and 12 months to raise maturity by one level. Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model 3

A recommended approach to improve process capability is to appoint process owners for the KPAs to be addressed. For example you could appoint one person to drive improvement for Business Case Development and Benefits Management KPAs and another person to drive improvement for Requirements Management and Configuration Management KPAs. An improvement roadmap should be produced showing the priority of the KPAs to be addressed and the set of initiatives which will improve them. The improvement roadmap should be used to drive and measure progress. It is important to recognise that if you are changing processes, policies, standards, job descriptions or reporting structures then you will be changing how some people will work. Therefore, as with any initiative that affects people's current working practices, power or authority, it should be treated as a change initiative. If the change is likely to be significant, it is recommended to establish a change programme to help with the transition. Using change methods such as Six Sigma help to structure the roadmap and ensure that the solution sticks. Step 4 - How Will You Know? To increase capability organisations need to collect metrics in order to provide a platform for continuous improvement. Therefore regardless of your baseline maturity it is recommended that the improvement roadmap identifies what metrics should be collected to demonstrate performance improvement. The establishment of Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) will not only enable organisations to determine when they have achieved their goal but can also be used to prove the Business Case for the process improvement journey (i.e. what is your return on the capability investment?). If your KPIs are showing that you have achieved your current maturity goal then you may wish to consider gaining accreditation for that level of maturity (for recognition or for marketing purposes) or wish to repeat the exercise to determine what is required to get to the next level of maturity. Using P3M3 for Benchmarking The first maturity model was developed as a means for the US Government to make better procurement decisions by comparing contractors' capabilities. P3M3 can be used in the same way. If you tender for government business then procurement professionals give more credence to an independently awarded certificate than a company's own claims of capability. Procurement professionals also give more weight to an organisational certificate than they do an individual's certificate (currently organisations submit PRINCE2 practitioner certificates with their proposal as an indicator of project management capability. With 200,000 PRINCE2 practitioners worldwide it is difficult for buyers to differentiate between them). Certification against P3M3 is now possible. The OGC's accreditation partner APM Group Ltd (APMG) have taken the OGC models and established an accreditation process for gauging the maturity level of organisations for their portfolio, programme and project management activities. Depending on the scope of the assessment certificates can be awarded for: PRINCE2 Project Management Programme and Project Management Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model 4

Certificates are awarded for the maturity level obtained, although few if any organisations would want a certificate for level 1 maturity. The highest awarded certificate to date (April 2006) is for Level 3 in Project Management. Using P3M3 for Skills Development A recent web search revealed some 300+ separate training modules relating to portfolio, programme and project management. The UK's National Occupational Standards for Project Management shows some 51 separate competencies for project management. A common dilemma which faces many HR professionals is deciding how to spread a finite training budget across a myriad of competencies. Which ones will yield the greatest impact on performance within this financial year? As part of the accreditation assessment method, APMG mapped the levels of process maturity to levels of people maturity (i.e. the portfolio, programme and project management skills). Using P3M3 and the APMG's competency map it is now possible to identify a roadmap of training modules that relate to your organisation's capability (e.g. there's little point in investing in training related to level 4 KPAs if your organisation is at level 2). Today there are numerous skills assessment tools available for HR teams to benchmark the people in their organisation. A common feature across all such tools is the ability to structure the assessment around a competency framework. Combining skills assessments with organisational assessment means that it is now possible to identify and sequence both the organisational changes and people changes as part of a coherent improvement plan. Using P3M3 for Benefits Management Since P3M3 describes a hierarchy of Key Process Areas (KPAs) that correlate to improved performance, it provides an excellent framework for assessing the impact of improvement projects. For example, if you are considering implementing an enterprise planning tool (such as Primavera) you can use the P3M3 model to assess how the tool contributes to the KPAs that are important to your organisation. Knowing what KPAs you need to target will help you scope which features to buy and/or implement. If you are introducing features that do not improve any of your target KPAs then it should prompt questions as to why those features are being introduced at all. Understanding your current capability against the P3M3 model also enables you to do a "before" and "after" assessment to quantify the impact of introducing such tools. P3M3 can also be used to address the impact of: Mergers & Acquisitions Organisation Re-structure Training & Development programmes Deployment of new technology Changes to Roles, Responsibilities, Objectives Implementing a governance framework Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model 5

Benefits A maturity model such as P3M3 provides a framework for identifying and prioritising those changes which will yield the greates impact on your organisation. It helps set expectations as to what is required in what sequence and in what timescale. Benefits from using the P3M3 as a basis for process improvement are: Improved schedule and budget predictability Improved cycle time Increased productivity Improved quality (as measured by defects) Increased customer satisfaction Improved employee morale Increased return on investment Decreased cost of quality Andy Murray is a PRINCE2 Registered Consultant and a director of Outperform UK Ltd. Andy holds a Diploma in Company Direction from the Institut e of Directors (IOD) the final step to becoming a Chartered Director. Andy has been using PRINCE2 since it was first launched in 1996 and has helped implement PRINCE2 in more than 20 organisations in more than 10 countries. Outperform UK Ltd is an Accredited Consulting Organisation (ACO) licensed to consult in the OGC's best practice products. Outperform is a corporate member of the Association for Project Management (APM), a corporate member of the Best Practice User Group and is ISO9001 certified. Project Smart is the project management resource that helps managers at all levels to improve their performance. We provide an important knowledge base for those involved in managing projects of all kinds. With regular updates it keeps you in touch with the latest project management thinking. http://www.projectsmart.co.uk Portfolio, Programme and Project Management Maturity Model 6