Introduction To Project Management
Introduction To Project Management
Introduction To Project Management
A basic introduction to common project management processes that may be typically encountered during a projects lifetime. Complied by AlNik Solutions for project managers using PMPlan products.
Agenda of Presentation
General Project Management Work Breakdown Structure Scheduling Earned Value Management
Planning
Refines the project objectives and scope and plans the steps necessary to meet the projects objectives.
Executing
Puts the project plan into motion and performs the work of the project.
Controlling
Measures the performance of the executing activities and compares the results with the project plan.
Closing
Documents the formal acceptance of the projects product and brings all aspects of the project to a close.
Time
The schedule of the project. Modifying the schedule alters the start and end dates for tasks in the project and can alter the projects overall end date.
Cost
The cost required to accomplish the projects objectives. Modifying the cost of the project generally has an impact on the scope, time, or quality of the project.
Resource Pool
Schedule Development
Resource Planning
PMPlan can address these elements when developing the project plan.
Upper Levels are Planned outcomes (deliverables), not planned actions Ends of WBS include the activities needed to create the project deliverables Mutually-exclusive elements
Work should only appear in one place in the WBS
WBS must be consistent with the way the project will be performed and controlled Must be easy to update
WBS Role
Partition the major project deliverables into smaller components to improve the accuracy of cost estimates Provide a mechanism for collecting actual costs Provide a mechanism for performance measurement and control
Scheduling
Scheduling forces:
Quantification of discrete effort Placement of tasks in proper relationship
May07
Jun07
Ahead of Schedule
Planned Progress
Completed Task
Behind Schedule
Time Now
Start to Finish (SF) Activity A must start before Activity B may Finish. The lag is usually greater than either activity duration. FS is the least common type. Activity A Activity B
Start to Start (SS) Activity A must Start before Activity B may Start. The lag value is usually greater than zero. SS is a less common type. Activity A Activity B
Lag
D 4 E 1 F 7
2
8 0 0 12 G 7 18
Largest ES
10
2 0 0
18 25 18 24 18 34
H 7 I 4 J 1
24 31 21 27 18 34
(H to K) 25 - 2 - 1 = 22 (I to K) 24 - 0 - 1 = 23 (J to K) 34 - 0 - 1 = 33
A 6d
B 11d
C 20d
H 20d
J 20d
D 13d
E 9d
F 20d
G 6d
I 13d
J 1d 20d 20d
E 34d 9d 42d
G 34d 6d 39d
21 35
V 10
FT = FF =
30 45
10 0 FT = FF = 10 0 FT = FF = 0 0
29 39
W 7
35 45
36 46
X 5
FT = FF =
40 50
0 0
51 51
Z 10
60 60
44 44
Y 1
50 50
Does not:
Recognize Critical Paths
Will not:
Take management action
Measurement Terminology
Budget at Completion (BAC)
The sum of the total budget for a work package, major task, or project.
Performance Terminology
Cost Variance (CV)
CV = EV AV = BCWP ACWP
Note: Sample tables and graphics shown in following slides are from PMPlan
Schedule
This shows a sample project schedule
Planned Budget
The sample project is loaded with resources which results in an allocated spend plan.
The chart tells us we have spent less than planned to date, but We cannot tell if we are behind schedule, nor if the cost for work completed matches the actual costs.
The project manager or task leader enters either a earned percentage or a $ value. Actual Cost is also entered. In this worksheet, actual cost can also include open commitments such as unpaid invoices for material and equipment. The Threshold is a percent of the AV to the BAC, which determines when the application uses the CPI to calculate VAC. If AV is less than Threshold, the VAC equals CV. Based on the data entered, this project is both behind schedule and over budget. Even though the current CV = $4,000, the VAC indicates a potential overrun of $5,517. The next slide shows two other views of this data.
In the above sample, all three activities have earned values of 50% of BAC, but the black earned bars are not the same length even though the planned bars are the same. Task A is behind schedule, because 75% of the budget was to be spent by end of December. Task B is ahead of schedule, because only 25% of the budget was to be spent by end of December.
Can:
Provide early (Difficult to ignore) performance problem identification Improve financial Reporting
Does not:
Recognize Critical Paths
Will not:
Take management action
We are ready now to see how PMPlan can help you with these processes