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ABOUT THIS IPMC EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
This handbook is derived from actual reviews of mission critical information systems projects. It sets out a concise, high-level framework for project management. Within this framework is provided a series of practical suggestions for Federal executives involved in management of mission critical information systems.
The following pages are not intended to be exhaustive. Rather, they provide a quick, sensible overview of useful practices and tools for the effective management of information systems projects.
Contents
Executive Summary: Making Projects Work
Meeting the Mission
Align the Project Mission with the Agency’s Mission
Know the Project Stakeholders
Amplify the Voices of Your Customers
Maintain High-Level Communication About the Project Mission
Strategies
Set Realistic Business Objectives
Define a Sound Architecture
Gain Agreement on the Project Plan
People
Organizational Leadership
Project Leadership
Project Team Members
Processes
Planning
Managing Technology
Controlling Tasks
Appendix: Tools for the Toolbox

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: PROJECT MANAGEMENT
Project management delivers results. The practice of project management can focus efforts on your mission by aligning priorities, leveraging resources, and delivering services to customers. A successful project translates a broad public mission into concrete results and outcomes. The following issues are critical for making projects work.
Meeting the Mission: Why are you undertaking this project in the first place? Who are the stakeholders and the customers? What are their expectations for the project? How does the project mission fit into your agency’s mission?
All activity on a successful project supports a well-bounded, agreed upon mission. As a project progresses, it is often necessary to take a step back and realign individual project elements with one another and with the project mission. Successful projects strike a balance among strategies, people, and processes.
Strategies: What do you want to accomplish with this project? Articulate the business objectives, the technical environment, and the project plan.
People: Who are the project participants, and how are they organized? Communicate with the organizational leadership, the project leadership, the team members, the stakeholders and the customers.
Processes: How will the project accomplish its objectives over time? Define the planning processes, the technology management, and the control of tasks.
Project management provides a proven way to set priorities and achieve results. Make use of project management to gain a realistic perspective on the "big picture," to maintain focus on priorities as they evolve, and to help sort out what must be done to make the project a success.
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